3 Feb - You really have to be a skier if you want to be a national hero in Norway. Having said that, chess prodigy Magnus Carlsen managed to dominate Norwegian headines by becoming world champion at chess during the warm season; even our local shop is now stocking books called "Learn chess with Magnus Carlsen". But with the Winter Olympics about to start, most other things will come to a halt in Norway. When Katie came home from school yesterday, she mentioned that she'll need to take a few snacks to school on the day of the Men's Relay, because the class will be spending the day at the teacher's house. Most of the pupils will be joining him in front of the television; the few that are not that interested can play cards in the kitchen. They really know how to do school in Norway.
It's a good job the Winter Olympics are not here this year, though. The January gales ended abruptly last night and we woke up this morning to a strange and unexpected silence. We went outside and nearly fell over because we've grown so used to leaning into the wind. The temperature has also shot up by 20 degrees or so, which means that the wind has been replaced by a new sound -- falling rocks dislodged by the thaw. Driving out of Ørsdalen, I had to stop a couple of times to drag large rocks off the road (looking nervously up all the time in case more were on the way) before I could drive on, while the biggest danger in the tunnel is that one of the huge icicles will suddenly decide to drop off and impale you like something out of "The Omen". According to this morning's news, one of the main roads in southern Norway is currently closed because of half a dozen such icicles dangling from a rocky outcrop above the road. The Highways Authority is on their way with rifles in order to shoot them down (which somehow sounds more like a fun solution than a practical one, but never mind). Now there's an idea for the ski shooting next time the Winter Olympics are in Norway.
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4 Feb - "We were just watching Derrick on the television, and when we looked behind us there were three faces at the window, all watching the programme". It's a while since we had a moose story, so I thought we should include this complaint from Fagernes regarding moose standing in people's gardens to watch telly and - as seen on this photo - to eat the food they've put out for the birds.
Thank you, Pat, for sorting out NMS (who a few days ago were looking for a right hand). She's found one, formerly the property of St Vincent and now in Valencia Cathedral (photo here), so it has perfect ecclesiastical and foreign-church-experience qualifications. All sorted!
6 Feb - Today's news story, courtesy of Andrew, will require a bit of careful translating, but I think it's worth it. You know Lapland, in north-east Norway? The people who live there used to be called Laps ("Lapper" in Norwegian), but that's now regarded as a disparaging term and therefore politically incorrect, so they're now called Samene (which is the correct name in the Sami language). Just file that information away, and come with me to southern Norway, where - entirely unrelated and coincidentally - the dialect word for something similar to Scotch pancakes is ... "lapper". Now we put those two bits of information together. The cafe menu at a university in southern Norway today carried a special offer (photo, left): to celebrate the national day of the Sami people - freshly made "Lapper" with jam. When incredulous passers-by pointed it out, the cantine hastily took it down. "Pure accident", they said, "we didn't mean it".
7 Feb - Happy 14th birthday to Katie!
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Andrew's spent the week digging - see two photos of his digger.
8 Feb - Swimming competition today in Egersund (photo, right - click for enlargement). Katie won her 50m freestyle (crawl) by a long way and put in creditable performances in both 100m breast stroke and 50m back stroke (new personal best in both).
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I (Tim) help out a little at the swimming club's training sessions on Mondays - mostly just watching to make sure no-one sinks, but also as an an apprentice shouter ("kick your legs properly!" or "One arm at a time!"). The benefit of doing this is that during the competition I was able to sit some of the time in the pool attendent's glass-fronted poolside office. The pool attendent was lamenting over his coffee (he always offers me one, too, which is another perk) that a politician had accidently been allowed to notice that the handrail on the edge of the spectator balcony was lower than regulation height. The balcony was closed for a few days and a temporary extra rail added to provide the necessary extra couple of inches. But it all needs taking down and doing properly - also in the adjacent sports hall which has an identical system. "It'll cost a million kroner", he said gloomily, "it's very expensive glass". Between races I went into the sports hall (which was cooler and less crowded and noisy than the swimming-pool area). At the front of the hall there's a climbing frame fastened to the wall - the sort of thing we used to have at school, but higher. Twenty feet up, there's a narrow ledge, from which diagonal concrete beams slope up into the roof at about 45°. From those beams came a happy "whee!" sound. A little gaggle of seven-or-eight-year-old girls had also found their way into the sports hall, climbed the climbing frame up to the ledge and were now having great fun on the "slide". A much more Norwegian attitude to health-and-safety regulations. Happily I was saved from having to decide whether to be a spoilsport and fetch them down by the arrival of some parents (who may or may not have been the parents of the girls, but I chose to believe that they were) who took the whole thing as entirely normal. So I went back to the little office for the next race.
Books - One of the things we've enjoyed for the past few years has been that Amazon UK has sent books to Norway with free delivery. Sadly, they've stopped doing this - leading to a reduction in our orders! We've just found another online bookshop this does offer this service, however (and given that there's no VAT or import duty to pay on imported books, it's very handy) - www.bookdepository.co.uk. Highly recommended for getting books to Norway (or other countries)!
10 Feb - The job of "right hand" was sorted by Pat, so I'll mention a new job advertised in today's paper which requires twice as many hands, and a couple of feet to boot - they want an organist. It's not a place that would naturally appeal to Tracy, so we won't be going, but I'm sure someone will want it - it's extremely well paid (over £60 000 p.a.), free furnished house and car provided and a very low tax rate. Required qualifications include driving licence classes B (car) ... and S (snow scooter). Location? see map.
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11 Feb - Carnival time in Ørsdalen! Katie decided to be a giant panda, but her head was in great demand (head-hunted) - no wonder they're a threatened species! Click photo, left, for enlargements.
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12 Feb - It's important to wear a hat when coming home from school in the snow. See photos.
13 Feb - This page is only about life as it is seen from the seclusion of Ørsdalen. But just occasionally we take a peep over the mountains at the world outside. At the moment - even on the Norwegian news - we can't miss the stories of floods and storms around Britain, and we hope all our friends and relations there are keeping safe. I can't resist quoting from this morning's BBC news, in which Phil Davies, network services manager for Western Power Distribution (a Welsh electricity company), says: "We've got staff out there. We came in first thing this morning, but it's difficult, some of our guys can't get out of their vehicles let alone get up a pole to fix it. But we're bringing in guys from other areas." Are the non-locals more dispensable, we wonder, or just heavier?
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18 Feb - Another half term. Another English test. Another story. Click picture (left) to read it: unless you're Matthew, in which case you'd better not. It's all about the legendary mountain-navigating skills of Katie's brother. For the purposes of the test, the first three sentences were provided ("I was just about to blow out the gas light when I saw something close to the canvas of the tent. A large looming shadow. I felt my heart start to beat faster.")
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