Monday, 25 August 2025

Did the Church move for you??


An odd title for a blog post I know - but it really did seem that Kiruna's mining company Luossavaara-Kiirunavaara AB (LKAB) had arranged to move the Kiruna church just for us.


I explained yesterday why we had come to Kiruna and I'd pictured our visit as a chance to see some of the sights of the various events in the books/TV programmes which had introduced us to the place. 


The dates we spent in Kiruna were factored by the time we had between leaving Norway and catching the plane back from Stockholm to London - so the dates we were due to be here had long been planned. 


What a surprise then, when about six weeks ago I logged on to the Kiruna website to see.


Yes, that's right, on the two days we are going to be in Kiruna (August 19th and 20th) they are going to be moving the City's Church. What a wonderful coincidence.


But before we hear more about the church move, let's start the day at the beginning - as Julie Andrews' used to sing - It's a very good place to start.


Early Morning


I slept until 4am this morning and I slept really well. Even going to bed as early as 10pm didn't stop me from sleeping through to 4am, longer than I usually sleep at home. 


Waking refreshed I started to blog about Bodø and the evening on the ferry. Drew wakes at 5.20am and I make tea for the both of us as usual. 


I go into the shower at 6am and Drew at 6.20am then walk over to the reception area for our breakfast as it starts at 7am. This is the view from our cabin front door - so it isn't far.


It is a bit of a shock to find that the weather is a bracing 6°c feeling like 4°c with the addition of the biting wind. It was a striking reminder that weather, especially temperature, is not only a determinant of position, we are 2 degrees south of Tromsø, but of the distance from the sea and power of the wind. 


Breakfast 


A large number of people have the same idea of an early breakfast with about 30 people all in a line for the food as we arrive. We manage to negotiate this large group of Spanish visitors. 


Drew struggling to see where which food was started with pancakes and cloudberry jam.


I managed to get a chia pudding and yogurt with seeds, nuts and corn, perhaps my elbowing skills are better!!



Drew then had a Finnish Ruisreikäleipä - a rye cracker with a circle in the middle. The hole had a functional purpose in the bread's development. The bread was baked in flat rings to be placed on poles suspended just below the kitchen ceiling to mature and dry in the relative warmth - meaning it would last through the long winters in Northern Finland. He had this with bacon.



I had found the pickled fish and vegetables with a Swedish brie style cheese. Interestingly the selection of pickled herring has a different taste and pickling liquid from those of nearby Norway, but they are still yummy.



I also tried a Ruisreikäleipä which is crunchy with rye flour flavour and plenty of salt.



Things having quietened down I went for a meat, egg and vegetable mixture as an alternative to the fish heavy diet of Norwegian mornings.  



Drew also had bacon and scrambled eggs, but added a boiled egg too.




To the Church


We go back to the cabin at 7.45am and leave again at 8.40am to walk down to the church, which by this time is already on the move, as we see on the live feed on the town website.


The walk to the church from Camp Ripan is 0.6 of a mile, walking back the route we walked from OK Parken the day before and going a similar distance to where the church was.


 By now this wasn't the most interesting site.



But across the road and less than a hundred yards from here was the church and the crowds. The scene is well covered in this video selection of our photos from this morning.


Though in case the sense of motion wasn't clear (actually it was) I also took a short video with my phone camara which shows the gentle trip this valuable building is on.


The event was exciting for us who were stood around watching it happening, but it made international news, with detailed reports and live church cam from the BBC and reports on the Guardian Website


Spoilers here - the BBC even recorded a timelapse video of the whole thing 


Undermining


Thinking about the church move and all the previous and planned moves in Kiruna, brings us to a word I have used for many years without thinking. My only association with undermining was someone who was hurting, not helping the personal development of another. It is only today that I suddenly realise the root and real meaning of undermining. If you dig for long enough under a building, church, town hall, house etc you are mining under it, and a sufficient amount of this mining will undermine the building by meaning it has a huge chasm below it.


LKAP are rebuilding or moving the properties in Kiruna because the worlds' voracious demands for 'rare earth' minerals mean that the mining has gone on deep under the surface here, until the buildings are undermined. Now LKAP can, rightly, say - the town wouldn't exist without the mine. It is true that before the mine development in 1890 the area was lived in by nomadic Sami people herding their reindeer, there wasn't a Kiruna as such. So, it is ironic that the resource which led to the town being built is that which has led to it being undermined and rebuilt/removed.



Indeed, the very church at the centre of today's action was designed, built and paid for by the mining company to attract workers to its area. Now they are paying to relocate the city and its heart.


Incidentally the idea of an undermined city has become a drama for Netflix called the Abyss, based on the premise of the town sinking. Being a free TV viewer I'm not likely to see it in the near future, but for those who pay for additional channels, I'm sure the setting will make it a great watch. 


Further exploration of Kiruna


We left the area of the church movement, determined to catch-up with it again tomorrow and saw a familiar name on Google Maps - the Kiruna Coop Store


Why familiar, because in one of the dramas we have watched this is the sight of an abduction and subsequent search for a young women. We visited, but came out un-abducted.


Why does this always happen to me


Regular readers of my holiday blog will know that I have a history of going to inappropriate places when walking around towns I don't know and there is seldom a holiday when this doesn't happen - well today is that day. Be it the man who started banging his head against a wall in San Francisco in 1994 or the instance of the body being forced into the boot of a car in the same city in 2002 or less salubrious places in Miami, Sydney, Paris, Havana, Rome, Dubrovnik and many others - today's the day.


Having left the Coop at 10.20am - two hours into our morning walk. I felt ready for a coffee. Drew decided to walk towards the City Centre (or New City Centre as it is called here as it was built only three years ago). I said we could look at Google Maps and using the 'Coffee' button at the top of the map saw it was only a short distance to 'Beans in Cup' so we walked into an industrial estate


Drew, having been dragged after me to such places too many times to mention, began to say, it can't be up here, but I could see it on the map


We walked further and the path moved from tarmac to scrapped earth - and 'Beans in Coffee' turned out to be a Coffee machine supplier, not a provider of caffeinated drinks - oops.


For the next half hour as we negotiated our way through the industrial estate Drew reminded me with some vigour, that it is always better to listen to a Drew. But of course, he said: "You'll never learn". 

[Co-pilot's note: I wish, dear readers, to introduce a by-line here. Our valiant blogger always insists "I know a short cut" - We all know he does not "know a short cut" but we are still dragged along behind him. I am not the sole victim of this. Poor Dr. Alice Lau, often regalad me with tales of his "expert navigation skills" when he dragged her behind him at a conference or other. Today, as well as saying: "I know a short cut" he added. "I like seeing industrial estates, it gives you the flavour of a city". It is very vexing, dear readers, very vexing.]

Lesson over we found some other dug up area of the City, this time however it was preparatory work for the church to make its stately progress tomorrow. 




We arrived at Espresso House in the New City Centre at 11.40am, yes my detour took an hour and twenty minutes.


You'll note that to avoid my usual complaint of not having as much fluid as Drew with a European size Americano - I order two to his one Caffe Latte - we needed fluids by this time.


Drew also needed his first Kanelbullar of the holiday, This Swedish fika not to be confused with the similarly named Kanelboller which he encountered in Norway.


New City Centre


Kiruna New City Centre is quite an impressive location. You can read about its transformation here

From the clock tower


to the modern Scandic Hotel


the City Hall, known as the Kristallen (Crystal)


to the new Library


and three malls built around the New Centrum as the old one begins to show the cracks of undermining. 


The centrality of the City's reliance on Iron Ore isn't missed.


Today, however it also had the role of the centre of the live - 7am to 7pm - broadcast on Swedish Television of the Church move. If you want a peaceful 15 hours (8 the first day, 7 the second) you can watch the whole thing as a piece of Swedish Slow TV here.

The poor Swedish presenter was looking freezing (see him on the left) on the stage 


and live on the big screen behind me.


Back to Camp Ripan


We left the City Centre and found that our Google mapped route back to Camp Ripan wasn't open - as the church is going that way tomorrow.



Drew again felt I was taking him down routes he would prefer not to go.


Others might have liked the large diggers all around 😉 

[Co-pilot's note: Again, dear readers, I feel the need to correct the record. Our valiant blogger was clearly informed by the co-pilot that this was a building site! The presence of cranes, diggers, rebar, people in hard hats and hi-vis jackets, all indicated the construction site nature of this area. But still we ploughed on. I would have thought, the lack of other pedestrians might have been an indicator that this was not a safe route. Very vexing, dear readers, very vexing.]


Though seeing a unicyclist on the route back was a moment of amusement.


As we are travelling by sleeper train at the end of tomorrow, we decided to stop at a small coop on our way back to Camp Ripan.

The Coop Lappgaten was only ten minutes from the camp.


Though, as per the rest of the day, the return route wasn't necessarily the most pleasant one. 


Is it Hirwaun or Dyfatty this brings to mind for you??

Drew was not, I'm sure, secretly hoping I'd slip down this slope to prove he was right again!


But it turned out Google was correct this time and at the bottom of the unlikely incline we were on the path on which our cabin is located. 

Afternoon in Camp Ripan


We arrived back at the cabin at 3.10pm and unpacked our goodies for tomorrow night    


Strange that Drew's chocolate and Oreos didn't make the picture!


Blogging


While the cabin had wifi, the connection was slow. Fine for normal use, but large uploading, editing and downloading of photos was difficult. So at 3.30pm I went across to the reception area of the camp and had an excellent connection. 


Indeed by the time Drew came to join me for coffee at 5.30pm 

I had loaded every photo we had taken up to yesterday and began a blog post.


Dinner


We had booked dinner at 8pm, late for us, but with all the arrangements about the church, the Camp is full tonight and by the time we decided to eat here again, they earlier slots had all been booked.

This evening we were offered a pre-starter of Black Bread and Seed Bread with whipped cream and beetroot. 


The black bread is the same texture and taste as a Frisian loaf Drew makes me on occasion- it is really tasty (his and theirs). The seed bread is like toasted trill with some binding agent!!


For starter Drew choose Tomato carpaccio 


The tomato carpaccio was with basil oil and strawberry chutney, served with Västerbotten cheese crème, pine nuts, bread crisps and basil. It was exceedingly tasty with a salty tang that brought out the sweetness of the tomatoes which worked really well with the cream cheese. The dressing was tangy and with the pinenuts formed a pesto crunch. 


I opted for the starter Drew had had last night - Ren - Reindeer - Croquettes of smoked suovas reindeer and grated cheese from Svedjan, served with parmesan crisps, lingonberry sauce, radish and red onion - It was lovely - the parmesan crisps were topped with fresh parmesan which tasted really well with the reindeer balls, excellent celebration of local and international prodcuts.

Drew had been planning to have the fish - Xander - tonight, but by the time we got to order they had run out, so the Halloumi Burger was his second choice


He was very happy with it though. The cheese was a standard chargrilled halloumi, with squeak, it had a ketchup type sauce with a spicy tang and the peppers added a lovely texture. 

I opted for Sirloin 


and apologies to my vegetarian and vegan friends, but it was wonderful. I asked for bleu and I got bleu, perfect cooking.



They served the Sirloin with roasted new potato salad as a side.


The salad had lots of balsamic and vinegar - brilliant flavour, the balance of hot spuds and cold tomatoes etc. worked really well.

Drew finished with a dessert called Crinkle 


The Crinkle cookie with roasted apple and nut ice cream was sweet even by Drew's standards, but there was none left remaining at the end.

We finished the meal with an espresso each, again served in a Sami wooden cup. 


We finished dinner at 10.05pm. 

During the day we have done 18,506 steps that's 8.5 miles or 13.7Km - perhaps those short-cuts weren't to short after all!!


We were glad to get to bed at 10.30pm and I was soon fast asleep.

8 comments:

  1. Interesting: it hadn't occurred to me before, but the Julie Andrews song you refer to, gives more than a nod to Alice in Wonderland. In the court scene, the White Rabbit is asked to read out the charges:
    ""Where shall I begin, please your Majesty?" he asked.
    "Begin at the beginning," the King said gravely, "and go on till you come to the end: then stop.""
    I probably hadn't noticed how Rogers and Hammerstien referenced Lewis Carroll: probably because, although I am a great fan of Alice in Wonderland (and even have a cupboard full of Alice merchandise), I have never seen the Sound of Music.

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    1. Hi Robin,

      While I've read Alice nine or ten times since I first read it as an 8 year old, it was a favourite of my mother, but I hadn't recognised that potential link - even though I saw Sound of Music with my mother in the 1960s; I even had the sound track of the musical as an LP the following Christmas!! So both are very familiar, but I haven't seen the link until now!!

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    2. Another interesting aside: Google's AI states that the "Where shall I begin, please your Majesty" dialogue , is from the Mad Hatter's Tea Party. What nonsense! Neither the White Rabbit nor the King were the tea party in question. This is certainly not the first time I've found AI making things up.

      In another aside, it may be that Rogers and Hammerstien were influenced by Cole Porter's song, 'Begin the Beguine', although this was very popular in the 1950s when Sound of Music was being written. Both, I would suggest, are derivative rather than plagarism. And both excellent in their own right.

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    3. Hi Robin,

      Yes, I've found myself ignoring the AI suggestions as they can be so way out.

      I like the link to Begin the Beguine, a lovely tune - perhaps they were influences, perhaps Rogers and Hammerstein just invented the idea, but here we are 60 years later discussing it, so it clearly had an impact.

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  2. Well Haydn you had in tears of laughter over your toasted trill comment!🤣 Regarding the church move I very nearly messaged you to ask you if you would see it but thought no you are in Norway! Those huge rye breads with a hole are in IKEA food shops...I have been getting them for years, although not recently. They used to remind me of the Celtic quorn stone! And before I forget I thought your norwy blog name came from the Welsh language spelling of Norway.

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    1. Hi Linda,

      the idea came to my mind as I ate it, so I had to share it.

      Luckily for us we were coming here anyway, the church move was the icing on the cake.

      And yes, that's exactly where I got the name - but Robin is right it was because the other names were used up.

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  3. So we are at that point where I assume you are home but I have completely lost track of what day of your holiday / the week you are on!!

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    1. Hi Lloyd,

      This would be Tuesday, I'm currently running 6 days behind real time, three more to go (possibly four) and I'm done. Tonight's post, just completed brings us to last Wednesday.

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