A new trail in Swedish Lapland (southern Lapland)
Posted: Sat Jan 08, 2022 3:47 pm
When I was in Sweden last year the county was working on finishing this new trail or we would have continued and done it. This new trail extends the famous Kungsleden (King's Trail, 440km) another 190km to the south.
I love the Sami woman's leather coffee pouch in the video clip. The Sami ("Lapp" is considered slightly derogatory and the Sami call Lappland- Sapmi) are a very interesting people, my wife and I are close friends with a Sami family we have known for many years that is still herding reindeer on the Saltfjellet in Norway (A seven or eight day ski from the north terminus of this new trail). A wonderful culture.
BTW the greatest skier who ever lived came from Hemavan/Tarnaby- Ingemar Stenmark.
In my opinion Sweden over-marks their winter trails with these orange/red Xs on poles every 20 meters or so, they are ugly year around! In Norway they only mark Winter trails south of Trondheim (so the ones I do not ski) and they use tree branches so when the snow melts they just fall over and look natural. They only do the marking around Easter because that is the massive national ski pilgrimage to the cabins (and a good time not to travel there!). In the the north of Norway no winter trails are blazed or marked and no winter routes are marked on the topo maps anywhere in Norway. You plan your own route before you go and you do your own navigation. The planning is quite time consuming (and fun!!). Good winter navigation skills are essential, if not go to Sweden hahaha.
I love the Sami woman's leather coffee pouch in the video clip. The Sami ("Lapp" is considered slightly derogatory and the Sami call Lappland- Sapmi) are a very interesting people, my wife and I are close friends with a Sami family we have known for many years that is still herding reindeer on the Saltfjellet in Norway (A seven or eight day ski from the north terminus of this new trail). A wonderful culture.
BTW the greatest skier who ever lived came from Hemavan/Tarnaby- Ingemar Stenmark.
In my opinion Sweden over-marks their winter trails with these orange/red Xs on poles every 20 meters or so, they are ugly year around! In Norway they only mark Winter trails south of Trondheim (so the ones I do not ski) and they use tree branches so when the snow melts they just fall over and look natural. They only do the marking around Easter because that is the massive national ski pilgrimage to the cabins (and a good time not to travel there!). In the the north of Norway no winter trails are blazed or marked and no winter routes are marked on the topo maps anywhere in Norway. You plan your own route before you go and you do your own navigation. The planning is quite time consuming (and fun!!). Good winter navigation skills are essential, if not go to Sweden hahaha.