Cycling Norway - Day 3
It’s crazy spectacular gorgeous around here like nothing I’ve ever seen.
You come around a corner and “wow”. You rise over a hill, “wow”. The boat rounds a bend. “Wow”.
The pattern for the day, as Rich explained to us at dinner last night was:
- hotel ->
- van ->
- tunnel ->
- start riding ->
- road-road-road ->
- ferry ->
- massive climb! ->
- lunch ->
- climb a bit more ->
- descent ->
- ferry ->
- big climb ->
- amazing view ->
- fast descent ->
- final little climb to kick you when you’re down ->
- hotel!
And, yeah, that’s pretty much how the day went.
First a few pictures from the morning, with some gorgeous views and waterfalls of the morning fjord…
And now let’s get to the climb.
The climb was the Trollstigen, or “Troll’s Ladder”. The road goes out a long valley, climbing steadily, rounds a bend, and ramps up towards a dead-end canyon. It climbs out of the trees past amazing waterfalls, then switchbacks up one side of the mountains, crosses a set of waterfalls, and climbs up the other side of the valley… eventually surfacing into a high alpine valley still covered with snowfields. It’s probably the most amazing climb I’ve done… the road was fantastic, the waterfalls stunning, the views epic and magnified by the close proximity of everything in the narrow valley… just tremendous.
As we approached the Trollstigen, I was riding with Rich on the quiet backroad. I kept looking up at the peaks surrounding us. “These aren’t the Alps… or the Sawtooths… or the Dolomites. They look and feel different.” He nodded. “This is Norway.”
The van stopped at the base of the climb for people to adjust their gear. I tossed in all my warm gear, choosing to ditch arm warmers, knee warmers, the gilet… pretending it was a warm summer day - generating heat while going up was not going to be a problem… - and left before everyone else was ready. I knew I would be caught, but I wanted to do most of the ride on my own to enjoy it… plus I figured that if I was out in front, it would give Mark and Dan something to gun for, and keep me pushing to stretch that lead out as long as I could.
The climb was spectacular. I had to stop a few times to get pictures… couldn’t stop myself.
It was SO GOOD to be on a serious climb again. I’m not a climber, but this is what hard road cycling is about… pushing yourself to the breaking point, getting through the pain, finding out what’s up on top, making infinitesimally slow but steady progress towards the peak that you know must be up there somewhere… those flat rides along the coast were pretty, but this is what it’s about. This, and going downhill fast.
Mark and Dan eventually caught me just near the top. I managed to latch onto Dan’s momentum just at the end and we all arrived at the visitor center in the high valley.
Great views… lousy food. We hung out, cooled down, and took pictures while we waited for the rest of the group to arrive on top.
The descent down the other side was meh. Very pretty, but long and not that steep… took a lot of work to get down. From there we took another ferry, to the next climb.
The next climb was not as amazing… more of the long, usual, steady climb making progress up and over a high pass. Dan and Mark vanished ahead while I rode with Rich.
Eventually he faded off the back to ride with some of the other folk. I summited and then dropped down the descent to the first hairpin, as instructed, where we gathered the group and enjoyed an amazing view of the Gerainger fjord.
Wow.
After a fantastic, steep, hairpin-loaded descent (best of the trip so far), we arrived in Gerainger, a sleepy little village that is a destination town for cruise ships on serious fjord duty. We climbed up through the town a bit to get to our hotel.
Phew, done for the day.