Tales from the north

Travel Sean Norman Travel Sean Norman

Deeper into the Faroes

 

It was the breakfast with the most beautiful view of my life. I could feel my heart in my chest. Half of me couldn’t run out to the bow of the ship fast enough while the other half could stay with my hot coffee, breathing it all in from breakfast for ever.

We were sailing up from Tórshavn to the small village of Funningur, on the island of Eysturoy toward the north of the Faroes.


On this morning, I had this anxious feeling that I couldn’t waste a moment. I wanted to see every grass covered hill, every stream and waterfall, every sliver of sunlight on a mountain or the ocean. In reality, there was no panic. We were going to have all day - all day to hike, take in a guided tour around town, and time to explore. It just hadn’t even really begun and I already couldn’t stand having to leave.

It reminded me of when I picked up my rental car in Iceland. The rental agent confirming my reservation out loud to me ‘5 weeks… Okay… And what do you plan to do in Iceland for 5 weeks?’

And to me, he was the crazy one. 5 lifetimes would not be enough, never mind 5 weeks.

And the Faroes just felt the same, and I knew it would be that way. The heart being ripped out of my chest feeling when it was time to leave — and it was definitely that.

 
 

The village of Funningur

 

After a little quiet time with some sheep up at the top of town - a waterfall above me, a stream cutting just in front of me, and the ‘pier’ down below me, I knew I should probably be getting back down to return to the ship, but I had that sinking feeling in my stomach.

“Of course it’s Sean!”

Coming around the corner of a building and down to the zodiac landing site, all our expedition guides and staff are lined up and one sees me and says with a smile and a laugh “Of course it’s Sean!”

I smirked, seeing that I was obviously the last one back joining a few others lingering around… “I know, I know - but I don’t want to, I don’t want to, I don’t want to!”, I say with a laugh back.

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Getting to and around Tórshavn, Faroe Islands

 

Following our departure from North Ronaldsay, there were a few of us crazies up in the panorama lounge loving life being thrown around by the ocean. Most of the ship was far less thrilled than we were though. The dining room at dinner was kind of laughably empty, and I chuckled with the dining room staff every time the ship got a good jolt. They had just come up from Antarctica and a season crossing the Drake, so this was all still childs play to them. But for me, the thrill of the waves rocking the ship made me feel like a child again. I loved it.

North of North Ronaldsay enroute to the Faroes

Some quiet time in the panorama lounge after dinner, culling bird photos, way too many bird photos, to the soothing motion of the ocean and a deepening twilight sky after sunset finally gave way to bed. Tórshavn would be in the morning, and the alarm for breakfast always comes way too early.

The night was… a little rough. But just how rough? My Apple Watch detected enough motion through the night to award me with standing hours while I was lying in bed sleeping.

Every so often I would be jolted awake to the thunderous boom of a wave hitting especially hard. I could feel myself smile and go immediately back to sleep.

 
 

My first puffins right alongside the ship as we slowed nearing the harbour of Tórshavn!

 

We had all day in Tórshavn, and started with a hike from the outskirts of town over to Kirkjubøur - a small community just over the mountains. It was more breathtaking than I could ever tell you or show you. The weather changed every 5 minutes, and our guide bumped into a farmer he knew so we stopped to gush over all his beautiful sheep. The views of dramatic mountainsides rising and falling into the sea, covered in grass and the most beautiful rock were just perfect. I loved the town, I loved the culture, I loved the nature, and it had been all of about 3 minutes.

For the rest of the day back in Tórshavn now, I walked the coast, criss-crossed through town, and of course, took the opportunity to seek out wool sweaters which was both overwhelmingly expensive and successful. A few of us showed up to dinner back onboard the ship that night in our distinctly Faroese hand knit sweaters.

It was the best, most magical day ever.

 
 
Torshavn harbour at twilight
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Trial by fire; zodiac edition

 

I was sitting in Abbotsford International Airport, about 20 minutes before boarding my first of 3 flights, wrapping up a call with Scotiabank to finalize my mortgage for Yellowknife. Possession day was 5 weeks away, and in 24 hours, I’d be touching down in Aberdeen, Scotland. From there, a couple days later, boarding the Quark Expedition Ultramarine for almost 2 weeks to sail further north than I’d ever been in my life.

I didn’t know what to expect of Scotland, or this entire cruise. I’d barely had time to think about it. For the week before flying out, I was sleeping on yoga mats on the floor of my dad’s place, painting, cleaning and packing the final few boxes of his life before he’d leave forever for the Philippines.

Retirement, at last.

My flights over took me through sunset, the northern lights, sunrise, way too much time in Heathrow, and a second sunset. I fell in love with Aberdeen. European grocery stores, twilight walks, daytime walks - accidentally to the next village down the coast in one instance. Grassy cliffs and fields blowing in the wind, hills of yellow flowers and charming neighbourhoods at every turn. Dolphins and seals visible from the harbour and cliffs. It was heavenly. I loved every second.

 

 

“Everyone’s a birder. Some of you just don’t know you are yet.”

 

Our first night on board the Ultramarine started with, of course, endless safety briefings, but also some news that a little storm was headed to us which gave such little hope of being able to go ashore to Fair Isle, we were instead making a last minute decision to try North Ronaldsay instead, where we ultimately were able to anchor down, zodiac to shore, and spend as much of the day as the weather would allow us.


I chose the long bird walk, because as Mark, our amazing, amazing bird expert expedition guide on board said to us our first night, “Everyone’s a birder. Some of you just don’t know you are yet.” And I loved it. I needed little convincing. I was hooked. Ready to give up a life of aurora chasing for birding, until he told me there’s no money in it either.


So instead of heading back to the ship via the zodiacs over increasingly rough seas we were warned about the night before, I and one other, literally, ran over to the 173 year old lighthouse to climb the couple hundred steps inside up to it’s balcony. That was one of the coolest experiences I think of my life. The wind up there made it nearly impossible to get all the way around the deck, but the views were breathtaking. But finally, windburnt, sweaty and out of breath, I ran back to the shore to begin what would become a trip long habit of being on the last zodiac back to the ship. Waves crashed up over the bow of the zodiac and over our heads. I understood without a doubt why waterproof clothing, head to toe, was mandatory, and not just recommended.

 
 
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Back to the roots

 

In a separate tab, I open my blog to check on my last post and manage to surprise myself seeing that it was back at the end of February. I knew it had been a long, long time, but I didn’t think that long.

I also knew when I titled it ‘Closing in’, that it was a subtle lean into what was coming - a somber end to my few years in Whitehorse. At the time I wrote that post, my apartment was under offer, I knew where I was going, but not yet where I would be living, and between those two small life changes, I would be embarking on the trip of a lifetime that never once felt quite real - but more on that next post.

For right now, my days are filled with reacquainting myself with where this life of chasing the northern lights nightly began. I am home again in Yellowknife, exactly 10 years and 2 days from when I moved here the first time, to once again take possession of a home I had not yet actually seen.

With so much to do, we wasted little time and began light renovations the day after I moved in, and it all remains ongoing. Tours begin in August, and I cannot, cannot wait. And finally I’ll lead you out of Whitehorse, through the summer in BC, and finally up to Yellowknife with a chaotic collection of photos.

 
 

 
 

After moving out of my place in Whitehorse, I spent some weeks with Doris in hers before I would head south for an abbreviated summer. We packed, and repacked every single box I thought I had perfected to all fit into my Sienna to take with me. No moving company this time, just what I could bring with me. But I had too much stuff, and I was too heavy. Moving day was not the best day of my life.

Over the next week and a bit, we opened every single box, re-sorted and repacked them, got rid of a lot (Doris will be eating dried lentils and rice for the next 3 lifetimes), weighed every single box and loose item, and set aside 2 boxes to ship ahead of another Canada Post strike.


All of this set me up full to the car ceiling, exactly 40kg under the car’s maximum takeoff weight, for an early, early morning out of Whitehorse to drive straight-ish through to my mum’s place, some 2,200 kilometres south. But this was not without a cat nap or two along the way as my eyes got heavy, twisting myself over and around boxes and plants to stretch out, time at the Liard Hot Springs, of course, and photography stops too.

Late, late pizza takeaway after move out day

 
 

Just completely taking over Doris’s life with my chaos here…

Weight ended up becoming a bigger issue than space

A little tail heavy despite my best efforts…


Driving through the night in northern BC and of course she kept me company


Typical summer views from my mum’s place in Kamloops

 
 

The final weeks leading up to departure day for Yellowknife were chaotic in everything from helping move my dad to the Philippines, couriering original (thank you, NWT, for being so relentlessly, painfully archaic - never change), notarized documents to Yellowknife from BC in the midst of another potential Canada Post strike, and making endless design decisions for spaces I had once again not actually seen.

With our final days planned and our departure from Kamloops sured up, we first spent some nights in Calgary with my grandparents, making final final decisions on design with trips to Home Depot and IKEA, but most importantly, bean bag toss tournaments in the backyard.

From there, just 1,800 kilometres and one overnight in smoky northern Alberta was between us and Yellowknife.

 
 

Smoky morning leaving High Level

 

Christmas in June…


 
 

So this is about where things stand. 70L of white eggshell paint down, 3 major appliances unexpectedly replaced, many IKEA orders received, more still on the way, and the main bathroom 2/3 gutted but on it’s way back, with the ensuite mostly finished, and a few closets gutted and redone.

When my dad asked how it feels to be back in Yellowknife, I said I wasn’t really sure because I haven’t actually really interacted at all with Yellowknife yet. I’ve barely been outside for more than repeating trips to Home Hardware and Canadian Tire.

But I am settling in, sleeping more than 5 hours a night finally, and taking time to breathe and practice yoga, of course. Sparrows, yellow warblers, and robins sing outside my windows all day, a neighbourhood cat wanders into my yard at breakfast for cuddles, and both the front and back steps make for perfect afternoon fika spots.

My first tour is already only about a month away, and I can’t wait for that, but all of this time since closing day in Whitehorse on March 28th has passed far, far too quickly. For now, time could not slow down enough, but this evening I’ll prepare for my new dishwasher that I should be wrestling into my place sometime tomorrow, while the rest of the bathroom walls upstairs are calling for the tiling to continue…

 
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The meandering drive back north

 

“Sometimes the absence of options leads to the best one of all.”

 
 

After our horizontal migration from Calgary to Kamloops, I think it was the evening before we were leaving to start our more leisurely drive back home and Stewart, BC wasn’t even really on our radar.

We were getting a little desperate at this point and had resorted to massive physical maps, like the ones from CAA. Where we wanted to end up around at the end of our first day driving back just felt like a dead zone. Smithers was too close and just about anything further north than that may as well have been an entirely additional day of driving. Hotels were sparse and our ability to make a decision was even more rare.

Then we circled back to Stewart on the map, and sure it was a little bit out of the way, but after reading rumours of glacier views from the highway and bears basically outnumbering humans, we found a charming hotel with crooked, creaky floors and amazing views and booked it.

That was probably my favourite decision from the entire trip.

On the highway in, the winds were wildly strong but the air so warm and sweet. We travelled right through golden hour, and you can only imagine how breathtaking that light was cast over the mountain peaks towering up from either side of the highway. We did see bears, as promised, and as much as I wanted to spend the rest of the little remaining daylight sitting in front of glaciers, we resigned ourselves to tea and treats in our cosy little room at the Bayview Hotel.

Our final couple days on the road were spent soaking in and soaking up Northern BC. Every time we passed the Liard Hot Springs, we spent some hours there, again dreaming of returning in the middle of winter. We found cosy accommodation in Muncho Lake Provincial Park, and wandered around the mountains and the most teal lakes I’ve ever seen. By the time we parked back home, we had done 6,141.4 kilometres in a week and a half and were ready to do it again in a heartbeat.


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