Tuesday, 12 August 2025

Mountains, Valleys and Rivers - a fun day in the Olden Valley, the Briksdal Valley and Loen


What a day - there was so much enjoyment today, first at a Glacier at the top of the Olden Valley and then on the Skylift in Olden. More details about both later in the blog, but, as usual, let's get back to the start of the day.



Time to wake

 

I woke up at 4.30am this Friday morning, a little later than yesterday, but after a good six and a half hours sleep I felt really well.


For me today is pay day - or as Drew calls it "Charitable donation from the taxpayer day" as I receive my University pension. I start the morning doing some accounting - I've been doing the holiday accounts daily, but not looked at my regular household accounts since leaving Cardiff a week ago yesterday! A radically long time for me, as I'm someone who normally checks each day (sometimes more than once a day 'just in case'.


Most of the income went in paying credit cards - one of mine and one of Drew's, the latter of which had been used for lots of the pre-booking of things for this trip during June and only now needing to be paid in real/rather than in accounting terms. Nice of the banks to give me interest free money for 50+ days every period! The little that didn't go to this got transferred to my high-interest savings account. 


I then loaded the photos from Wednesday of our travelling to Olden. As noted in the last blog post we discovered yesterday afternoon that the PC and camera are now not talking to each other. As my sister hints on her comments to my Flickr message, the overdue replacement camera Drew has been promising himself since before Covid may become a necessity now. 


Drew woke at 6.30am and I made us both a cup of tea, from our t-bag stash.


Breakfast


By the time I'd finished with accounts etc, we were delayed for breakfast going down at 7.30am. It is fishy Friday, but I didn't eat any meat yesterday morning as the other items were so appealing,  so fishy Friday is easy this morning.


The were walnuts this morning, so I had yoghurt, dried fruit and the walnuts.



Drew started today with a salad for a change.



I repeated the plan of having the wonderful cinnamon oatmeal.



Drew had his sausage, potatoes and bacon



And I had more pickles, herrings and mackerel



 

After breakfast we went back to the room to 'freshen up' then we departed at 9.45am for the 50 meters walk to the bus stop for the Skyss 115 bus to the Brikdalen Glacier. 



Where we arrive at 10.45am - guess what, right on time, it seems this is common for buses here. 


We walk up the 3km to the foot of the glacier, with amazing views on the way up as you'll see in this video. If possible on your device it is worth watching at full screen.




The walk was steep at points and steps at others, but was worth the effort to get the views along the way as well as at the end. The shower from one of the ravines through which the melt water flows was amazing going up and more so going down!


The glacier itself is fast receding through global warming, but is still a spectacular site. Drew, ever patient and considerate, ended up waiting for a Chinese lady to move so he could take a photo of the Glacier from the lake below - sadly the Chinese lady hadn't noticed him, so the more he edged to get beyond her, the more she edged into his way. The patient pictures are here:







The young lady then climbed on to a rock in the midst of the lake and twice almost fell in, Drew was ready in case she got the soaking I think he thought she deserved after all her antics. But she managed to balance and avoided the soak.

My picture of Drew and his nemesis 

 

Walking back was a little quicker until we came to one of the faster parts of the melt water river. On the way up it was breezy and creating enough foam to encourage us to pull our Mac hoods up, but on the way back the sun had come out and was making rainbows in the foam, as you'll see in the pictures below. In addition the wind had changed direction, so it felt more like a shower than a spray from a cascading river. Hoods, umbrellas and hats were all deployed by people travelling both ways. Some, including Drew and I had to wipe our glasses, so much spray had collected, they had their own minor rainbows in the lenses until we wiped them. 






We arrived back down the mountain at 12.15pm with an hour and a half before the next bus. 


We decide to eat at the Brikdalen Kafeteria, which is a lovely place with great views and good fresh food. 


We started with a sandwich, a shrimp open sandwich in my case and a ham and cheese one in Drew's.



We order mains which were brought to us at the table. Drew had Cheeseburger and chips and I had Mountain Trout with new potatoes, broccoli and cauliflower. The dish was served with a melted cheese sauce which is often used in Britain in Cauliflower Cheese. As I think this dish is a waste of good cauli and good cheese, I was happy it was served on the side and could be ignored. 



The trout was spectacular, flavoursome and delightful, here it is flesh side up




We finished with a coffee each, an Americano for me and a Latte for Drew. 


We catch the return Skyss 115 bus and depart at 1.30pm, the driver has waited in the cafe during the intervening time! It being a non-cruise ship day the 52 seater bus has only 8 passengers. 


The first exit was at Yri where two backpackers got off. The rest, exited later than us. 


Here are some shots of the Olden Valley as we head back down


We travelled on the bus to Leon, i.e. we went past Olden and our hotel and continued in the opposite direction to this morning to the Loen Skylift. 


Skyss Bus


A word about Bus ticket prices, Skyss, who provide local services in the Vestland region of Norway from South of Bergen up to Ålsund, have a discount scheme, the more you use the bus, the more the cost reduces. 


So we paid 98NKr (Norwegian Krona - £7.21) from the two of us from Nordfjord to Stryn on Wednesday (Using Google Maps for the driving, not the bus time and distance - 40 minutes - 46km).


We then paid 93.10NKr (£6.85) from Stryn to Olden (21 minutes - 17km), 89.18Nkr (£6.56) from Olden to the Glacier (34 minutes - 22km £6.31) this morning, 85.26NKr (£6.02) from the Glacier to Loen (41 minutes - 28km) and 81.34NKr (£5.80) from Loen back to the hotel (8 minutes - 6km). Note the values in NKr and £ sterling are for two people. So we started at £3.43 per person and ended at £2.40, this compares well with Stagecoach Tongwynlais to Cardiff - £2.80 per person for 19 minutes 8.7Km 


Loen Skylift


The bus arrives in Loen at 2.15pm as per the timetable. It is a ten minute walk to Leon Skylift. We purchase the tickets at the machine and are on the next 'car' by 2.30pm and arrive at the top at 2.35pm.


This is a great photo opportunities only slightly limited by Drew not liking edges, or as he says it's not the edge he doesn't like, it is the drop beyond. This video captures the images, most of whom I took - if you want to see them all in better defination - go here on Flickr and click forward.



We catch the return 'car' down at 3.05pm and arrive at the bottom at 3.10pm


We walk back to the bus stop and pop into the store (the brand name is Joker, which is less funny when you realise that a J makes the Y sound here) to buy snacks for tonight. As we've had a full meal for lunch it will be a picnic in the hotel tonight as we have been to all Olden's eating places that you can get to without a car - the best restaurant in the area seems to be the one at the top of the Skylift, but we don't plan to get stuck in Loen for the night. 


We catch the 4.00pm bus back to Muristrada and at 4.15pm we are back at the hotel. 



Drew spots a little boat going past the window at 6.15pm



It turns out it is one we took from the top of the Skylift in Loen earlier today:




Evening


I draft some blog content, wonder if we will be able to get the photos off the camara any time soon and go to bed at 9.30pm ready for our journey tomorrow. 


Today we have gone further, but done less on our feet than yesterday. We have a step count of 13,468 Steps, that's 10.1Km and 6.28 Miles. Still reasonable exercise to balance our food intake.

12 comments:

  1. Nice insight into your financial planning along with some stunning backdrops! Linking the 2 together I have a decision about getting a credit card to rack up avios points for future travels to replace the one I currently have that just provides some standard cash back.

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    1. My sister has made good used of Avios points in the past - I'm less focussed on 'money off' type things and more on the functional aspects - no overseas fees, free cash withdrawels etc.

      My current provider made me very happy this week. They have become the provider of my major card since Sainsbury's bank sold up to Nat West and they removed the no overseas fees/free cash withdrawl elements. So, this card, as one originally just for emergencies doesn't have as good a Credit Limit as that one. With the holiday costs all going on the card and the next payment date of last month's costs being the 21st I was getting within £1K of my limit - which is to tight for comfort for me.

      So, one morning this week I requested an extra £2K on the Credit Limit and they provided it instantly - I had to fill a 12 question form, but only with information I had in hand - salery/expenses etc. It is a long time since I've had to request such an increase and it was certianly easier this time than last.

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    2. the clock beat me on getting a new one, Avios would have been useful as we do tend to always work to BA as you know, but we are where we are ... I had to pay for a trip in Oct, so this will now be a decision for another day!

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    3. Oh pity,

      Yes I did think of your preference for BA and BA business at that. I'm sure there will be other deals.

      So, where are we going in October? - Is this Chicago - if so I have some dollers that I'm not using at least until 2029 - I can give you a good rate on them, given the deprectation they would have before then, with so many people choosing to stay away.

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    4. What a coincidence. I requested my balance increase on the card I now use more at the same time as you. I agree that it was a very quick and simple process.

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    5. HI Janet,

      That really is strange that we should be doing it at the same time - but possibly for the same reason

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  2. Glad to see the glacier story being teased out, after being hinted at on Flickr. The glacier pictures are excellent, well worth Drew's dance-of-doom with the Chinese lady.

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    1. Yes, it was fun at the time, Drew is normally quite placed, but when someone has annoyed him he can turn - she was about to see how, if she'd not moved on 😉

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  3. I do find some people can be very inconsiderate. I rarely have people in my scenery shots..they just clutter it up…but sometimes you have to juggle a bit when they insist on being photographed in every pose possible in front of an amazing view usually! The walk to the glacier photos were spectacular! I loved the rainbow ones too! Your photography is showing me that these Fjords are quite as spectacular, stark and massive as I imagined!

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    1. Yes Linda,

      they do have a big imapact.

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    2. Sometimes, random people can actually make the shot for you. This one, from the Moray Firth in Scotland, shows a group of tourists and their tour guide, staring out across the water, waiting for the dolphins to show up. https://flic.kr/p/tRb83C

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    3. That's a great one Robin, the sense of anticipation is clear just from the picture of their back.

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