Noremsbråttet, Utøy

Today’s walk with a girlfriend took us to a place neither of us had been to before. It took a bit to find the parking spot and we then started off from the car in the wrong direction, which just gave us a little bit more exercise.

The parking spot for two posts was well-marked once we were there. We will only do post 18 today. Post 19, a large rhododendron is best done at the end of May or June, when it is blooming. You will find that I have written a blog about it in 2020. http://trish.mclellan.no/2020/06/17/inderoy-walk-ordal-nature-reserve/
The information board gave information about the Ørdal Nature Reserve which includes the famous rhododendron. We did not walk into the nature reserve but ended up just before the boundary into it. Looking at the map on the board, we are walking at the top end of the map.

The Norwegian word “bråttet” or “brottet” refers, I think, to an area that has been recently cleared of trees. These two spellings would be pronounced similarly, depending on one’s dialect. These terms have been used on the names of two walks this summer, both of which take the walker to a high point with a view as there are almost no tall trees in the way.

We were lucky today with a morning with sunshine, though the temperature was about 10 degrees Celsius in the shade. When we got to higher elevations and were in the sun, I was walking in just a t-shirt.

The first part of the walk was along a gravel road. We were walking downhill at the beginning of the walk, which means you get a bit of an uphill climb just before getting back to the car.
We were walking in the shade so it was cool. We could also hear the farmer out cutting his grass and we had actually seen him when leaving the car.
But we didn’t walk that far downhill before we came across signs telling us to head into the woods. Another time I would like to go the whole way to the Rhododendron, just to see how to get to Noremsbråttet from the other side of the hill. My telephone tells me that at home, Noremsbråttet is only 3 km away, though that would be in a straight line and trails never go in straight lines.

The walk, as usual, took us up and down slopes. Though on the trip to Noremsbråttet it was primarily uphill, we both experienced that there were uphill sections on the way back to the car as well. The area we were walking in today is on the side of the hill on the east side of Skarnsund where the slopes are quite steep.

Here is an example of the trail we were following. It is narrow and in places it was quite damp. We had a lot of rain last week and most nights there is quite a bit of dew. This picture is taken looking back from where we came.
Though the trail was easy to follow and was marked well, it was not a very well-worn path. This trail is a bit out of the way, even for people living in Inderøy. Most of the human traffic would be in May or June when the rhododendron was blooming. By September, there are signs that many plants are getting ready for the winter ahead.
Looking up the slope, you can see how steep it is on this side of the hill.
Looking downhill the slope looks even steeper. But at this point along the trail there were lots of trees clinging to the side of the hill.
We were now up high enough to get a bit of a view, but there were still quite a few trees obstructing the view. Here we see Framverran on the west side of Skarnsund.
I knew that there were two trails to the rhododendron and this was the divide. We took the upper trail (“øvre sti”). The lower trail (“nedre sti”) to the right looked very unused and overgrown.
Then suddenly we came out into the open and got some sunshine. Here you can see that the blueberry plants are going red and loosing their leaves. There were still lingon berries (“tyttebær”) to be found. Now it felt like there was a bit more level ground and the path continued straight ahead and we stayed in this open area the rest of the way to our goal.
Then we climbed a bit more.
We came across a picnic table. It looked quite new, but this wasn’t our goal. We still had to cross another few hundred meters and on another rise we found our goal. The dark band of trees in the distance would be primarily spruce trees and I think that they would be in Ørdal Nature Reserve. We didn’t go that far on this walk.
We made it! Another 30 points on our app. My friend and I walk about the same amount so it is fun to find out how many points she has. She is a little ahead of me at the moment.
The view was spectacular. We are looking across to Framverran on the Mosvik side of Skarnsund.
Looking northwards to the hills of Steinkjer. No snow yet, but those hills will be some of the first ones to get snow in our area.
The highlight of the pause at Noremsbråttet was watching the eagle soaring in circles and almost never having to move his wings. I didn’t feel that there was any wind where we were, but the steep slopes will give up-drafts that allow birds to soar. It was very difficult to get a good picture of the eagle as he was just too far away. At one point he came a bit closer to us, and a small flock of small birds hastily moved from one group of trees to another group considerable farther away from the eagle.

This is a walk that I would recommend. There are steep bits where one needs to hold on, but they are quite short. The view at the top is beautiful on a sunny day. There was a picnic table to sit at while taking a pause before heading back. We used about half an hour each way, so about an hour’s walking.

Kvamsholmen to Undersåker Bay

On the 10th of August we went for a walk to the island called Storholmen. Today we again parked at the Recycling Center in Utøy and walked the same path down to the fjord as we had on the previous walk to Storholmen (see the previous blog here). But instead of walking out to the island we continued along the path towards Undersåker.

Storholmen is on the left, still just attached to land and the other islands are now isolated. It was an incoming tide, so the causeway out to Storholmen had much less above the water on our return trip to the car than had been the case on our outward walk.

As you can see from this picture, the sky was quite cloudy. Though we usually go for our weekend walk on Sundays, we chose Saturday this week as the weather forecast was better for Saturday morning. I noticed that just as we arrived home again, it started to rain so it was good that we weren’t out any longer or any later in the day. The temperature was about 12 degrees Celsius, which I find a nice temperature for walking. There was no wind, not even down by the water.

It didn’t take us long to come out of the woods and follow a road towards the honey farm at Kvamsholmen. One of my son’s classmates grew up here, but the farm has now been taken over by Tonje Kvam.

This sign is in both Norwegian and English and explains the life cycle of a bee, who lives approximately 40 days. In the summer there can be up to 70 000 bees in a hive.
We passed one house, or perhaps it is a cabin/summer house, and this pair of jeans was left out in the garden. I don’t think I would want to wear them again.
Undersåker Bay – My daughter was friends with the girls that grew up on one of the Undersåker farms. The tide is out. We walked around this bay, crossed a stream and sat down at a picnic table on a rocky outcrop just to the left of the center of the picture.

We came to a stream that drains several hamlets in Utøy and the stream seemed to have different names depending on which farm it is closest too. The sign below explains that the stream has been used for various purposes over the centuries: in 1620 it was used to power a stream grinder; there was a sawmill in the 19th century and a cement foundry in 1930 which used sand from the beach as well as the water from the stream.

I reacted to the name on the sign, “Storfossen”, the great waterfall. Yes, we have had a lot of rain this week so there was a lot of water in the stream and it definitely was noisy as it journeyed down to the fjord. But I didn’t think it was so very large.
Though I wasn’t able to measure the height of the falls, it seemed like about one or two meters at the most. After a week of rain, there was certainly lots of water in the stream.
The wooden bridge felt quite slippery, but thankfully there was a railing to hold onto. The bridge is under the trees so it probably never dries out. There was certainly a lot of moss growing on it.
A week of wet weather also made the paths a bit muddy. It was narrow here so I felt I had to walk quite cautiously.
Suddenly I came out into the open and we were at our goal for our walk for today – Undersåker Bay.
There was a picnic table to sit at while we took a well-deserved pause. The tide was out. Low tide had been at 9:12 about two hours before this picture was taken. So the water had already begun to rise.

The walk back to the car was just to turn around and go the same way back. We did make one little detour to a picnic place to see what the site offered.

In the background is the farm Kvamsholmen, and we decided to see what the “rasteplass” or picnic site had to offer.
At first I thought these buildings might be boathouses, but they did not have easy access to the water, except at high tide. A boat would have to be carried down to the water. As my son explained, the building would be used for storage of things needed for a day down at the water’s edge, a grill, chairs, perhaps a table, and a small boat that could be carried by two people to the water’s edge. They all looked relatively new and in good condition.
Undersåker Bay from a different angle. The goal of our walk had been on the far side of the bay, between the green fields on the left and the white house on the right.
There were some interesting rock formations here as well.
On our way back to the car, I noticed this older building. I notice the combination of stone foundations and wooden piles. The lower edges of the siding were showing signs of having been around for a while. I went around to the side of the building.
The side of the building was open and I could see what was been stored inside, though I couldn’t put names to much.
But then I found a sign about the building, that is probably from 1850-1910, so well over a hundred years old.

We had a good walk and used about 2 hours from leaving the car to getting back to it. But this also include a sit-down pause at Undersåker Bay and exploring a bit at Kvamsholmen farm. Because the car is parked at a higher elevation, the best exercise on the walk is getting back up the hill at the end of the walk. We were lucky with the weather and that made the walk all the more enjoyable.