2019-11-01 In The Moment

(John Hannent) #1
Clockwise from left: Senja's rugged landscape from the 659-m
peak of Barden; fjords and inlets weave across the island; Sarah
takes a moment to soak up Senja's golden sunshine.

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y mind was simultaneously on
overdrive and go-slow. There
was awesome everywhere:
the landscapes here were 2 4/7,
3 60-degree, high-definition nature
at its finest – silent and spectacular. There was no
single direction – or even time of day – in which to
look for the best; every hour and angle provided a
postcard view. I was overwhelmed by it, drowning
in fjords and snow-peaks and white-sand beaches; in
seas the colour of the Caribbean and cliffs streaked by
ribboning waterfalls; in headlands busy with seabirds
and skerries strewn as liberally as a millionaire’s
loose change. It was almost too much. And yet,
despite this round-the-clock bombardment


  • by beauty rather than buzzing phones and bulging
    inboxes – I also felt supremely calm.
    Natural light is good for us: it boosts vitamin D,
    improves our sleep and can even ward off seasonal
    depression. Moving about in green and blue spaces
    is known to be good for us too, not only able to boost
    physical fitness but to enhance our mood. So, a week-
    long midsummer walking trip in wild and unspoiled
    far-north Norway, under the midnight sun, promised
    to be better than any prescription.
    I’d come to Senja, Norway’s second-largest island,
    located well inside the Arctic Circle and a little north
    of the better-known Lofoten Islands, which are
    undeniably dramatic but increasingly overcrowded.


Less-visited Senja would, I hoped, provide the drama
and the daylight, the picturesque fjords and the
traditional fishing villages, the walking trails and the
welcoming hotels, as well as a complete escape from
the rat race – and most other people.
Certainly, there was no one else around as I started
a walk up Barden, a broad 6 59m-high peak rising
vertically from the ocean on the north of the island.
As birds twittered, a stream gabbled and the sun
shone, I had real spring in my step – for the joy of
nature and for the literal bounce of the mossy bogland
around Barden’s base. I’m not sure my nostrils have
ever felt so thrilled to be breathing. The crisp,
unsullied air was a pleasure to drink in as the climb
started to steepen over sprigs of heather and lichen-
smeared rocks.
After an hour or so, and just shy of the summit,
a large and untrodden patch of snow barred the way;
not unusual for the time of year. It would have been
foolhardy to try to go further. Perhaps on another day,
in another place, I might have been slightly annoyed
to be thwarted so close to the top. But not here.
I could still see one of the country’s – and perhaps the
world’s – great views: a slalom of craggy mountains,
bending hither and thither ahead, with inlets


  • Mefjord and Øyfjord – sparkling on either side.
    Directly below was another scoop of snow and a calm
    tarn – a mountain lake – cupped by the peaks. I sat
    on a boulder and did nothing for quite some time,


escaping

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