Cruised in
to Kirkenes this morning about 9am, this is halfway through our cruise, we head
south from here. The sun is up at 8.30
and sets at 12.59 today, it is zero degrees with expected 20 kilometre an hour
wind and we have plans to be on a husky sled ride, so warm clothing will be a
priority. Kirkenes has a population of 10 thousand people and 10 thousand reindeer.
We weren't aware the husky ride excursion also included a visit to the Snow Motel and
saying hello to the reindeer. We got a bus from the ship to the area, we are only 15 minutes drive from the Russian border so we hope the driver doesn't get lost?? The last person to accidently cross the border (in a kayak on one of the kayak excursions) was met by the Police on their return to the ship, was arrested, fined and deported.
First stop
was the Snow Motel, which is really an ice motel. The frame is built of timber and the snow is
packed on top and turns to ice, the rooms are formed by half globe balloon looking structures. The timber and all other supporting material is removed once the snow/ice is thick enough and hard enough to support itself,
the rooms are then decorated with beds, sculptures, tables and chairs. The rooms are rented out like an
ordinary hotel. Incredibly intricate ice
sculptures and carvings with ambient lighting which highlights the rooms and
sculptures which fill the rooms.
Kicked out
of the hotel so we went and sort solace from the reindeer. There are only male reindeer in the compound,
all have been castrated because they would become too aggressive and on some
excursions the tourists are able to enter the compound and feed and pat the
animals, I’m thinking the locals aren’t keen to have tourists impaled by randy
reindeer? They are molting their antlers
at the moment so they look pretty scrappy.
Next up was
the husky ride and what a ride it was!!
They have had some pretty horrible weather over the last couple of
weeks, snow then rain, then warmer weather which melts the snow. Lucky they are able to protect the snow on
the husky trail. The huskies are called Alaskan huskies, they all have some husky in them but are cross bred with many different breeds of dog with the only criteria being that they are strong, fast and intelligent. Looks and size play no part in huskies used for pulling sleds so there are many different looking sorts of husky in each pack. Once again we were the
first excursion in days able to do the ride.
It was fascinating talking to the musher about his experiences, he
actually breeds his own dogs and competes in races up to 600 kilometres long in
the winter. I’ll tell you his life story
when we get home, you’ll be enthralled!!
Back to the
ship and leaving Kirkenes for the way back south to Bergen.
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| The gang's all here |
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| Reindeer compound |
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| Pam about to lose a finger, she has already fed him a handfull of lichen |
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| Glamping beside the snow motel |
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| Plan of the Snow Motel - 14 rooms |
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| The main hallway |
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| Sculpture in the bar room |
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| The bar |
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| Some of the room sculptures |
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| On our way to Christmas |
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| Vernon having a lie down |
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| Christmas tree |
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| Last one |
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| One worn out husky. |
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| Off we goo!!! A musher actually stood behind us and controlled the whole show. |
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| Two of our five huskies |

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| The kennels in the back gound are used year round, the huskys are very well insulated and the kennels are off the ground with insulated floor, walls and roof. |
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| A pup looking for work |
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| Who would have thought? |
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| Moose country |
Snow motel looks super eerie!! Does it disappear in summer? Frozen margaritas only drink on the menu? Absolutely fascinating. Loved the history on the huskies/reindeers. They must be the lucky ones that don’t reach the menu 🥹. Do you sail the same way back to Bergen or experience different fiords (? - no spell correction). Looking forward to the next entry xxxx
ReplyDeleteThe hotel used to melt in spring and rebuilt every winter, but since 2019 they've covered it in a padded canvas cover and they just patch up and renovate the rooms as its needed. We are only a 15 minute drive from the Russian border so maybe vodka is served at the bar?? We do sail back the same way calling in to the same ports but the night time ports on the way up will be the daytime ports on the way down.
DeleteHow do they heat the snow motel? Couldn’t imagine that being a very successful business venture here in Oz! Hard to believe you’re now on way back! Time seems to fly doesn’t it? Enjoy rest of cruise, looking forward to rest of the blogs! Love to all ❤️
ReplyDeleteThere is no heating in the snow motel, not sure I'd be able to get a good nights sleep, maybe many vodkas would help. They said most people stay one night in the snow motel for the experience and then move to the glamping option for the rest of their stay. Time is flying by, even if most of it is in the dark!!
DeleteSo so good! And surely no cold drinks are served at the bar!!! Hot mulled wine for me that's for sure! Amazing adventure for you all! Love Deb xx
ReplyDeleteThey are very strict about any possible damage to the inside of the hotel, not allowed to touch the walls or sculptures with bare hands because it can melt them, we had to change into their boots before we went in to stop dirt from our own shoes being taken inside, if you want to sit anywhere you have to put down a deer skin because that will stop it melting the stool/chair/bed; so only cold dricks to be served at the bar.
DeleteFascinating.
ReplyDeleteJr