Ich (m25) und zwei Freunde (m23/m24) packen am 22. März von Tromsø nach Oslo – bis wir in Oslo ankommen. Gibt es mehr Landschaften, die entlang der Westküste nach Trondheim, Bergen und dann nach Oslo (Autobahn 15) führen oder durch Otta (Autobahn E6, glaube ich) führen?

Wir haben die nötige Winter-/Camping-/Wanderausrüstung für den Fall, dass wir keine Herbergen oder Hotels finden (keine wirkliche Sorge, da es scheint, als ob März bis April eine langsame Zeit für eine Reise nach Norwegen ist)

Ich suche nur nach hilfreichen Tipps! Auch wenn jemand in diesen Städten ist und uns coole Bars/Wanderwege zeigen möchte. Wir sind ein ziemlich cooler mexikanisch-amerikanischer Typ, der Skandinavien erkundet. Wir sind auf der Suche nach wunderschönen Landschaften, wunderschönen Städten, einer reichen Geschichte und Kultur und haben es nicht eilig, da wir drei bis vier Wochen Zeit zum Erkunden haben!

Danke schön! Hier sind die Routen, wenn die Bilder hochgeladen werden

https://www.reddit.com/gallery/1qdgel1

Von uuvlv

11 Kommentare

  1. runawayasfastasucan on

    > Is there more scenery going through the west coast down to Trondheim, Bergen, then Oslo (highway 15) or cut through Otta (highway E6 I believe)

    If by scenery you mean ocean, fjords, alpine mountains etc then yes. I would go even further west though.

  2. PinkPineappl3 on

    Definetly go Bergen then Oslo, the best part of the trip is Bergen – Oslo over the mountains imo

  3. RedditRytteren on

    Do you guys actually know how big Norway is, or did you just look at the map and think “yeah, that looks cool”? Walking from Tromsø to Oslo via Trondheim and Bergen in 3–4 weeks is… let’s just say extremely unrealistic.

  4. random_buddah on

    So are you traveling by car? Hitch hiking? Walking? Taking the bus?

    For reference, walking/hiking that distance would take you at least 2 months. Just for reference. It’s like traveling from Miami to New York.

  5. NedVsTheWorld on

    Check pilgrimsleden
    Trails from trondheim thats filled with hostels and cabins to sleep at

  6. My recommendation for what to see if you want to experience the best of Norwegian nature is always:
    * The west coast, the area between (and including) Lysebotn and Geiranger
    * Lofoten

  7. The times you show on the map are probably if you travel by car. It took my friends sister and husbound 24 houers of non stop driving from kirkenes – arendal. It takes 10 houers to drive from arendal – bergen. It will take a long time to hike trough norway, even more since there are snow in the mountians even in june/july. You need to find out how long it will actually take to hike that far. Not to mention all the unplanned obstacals like lakes, rivers, mabye non crossable motor roads ( you can get tickets for walking alongside some roads).

    Here is the official site for Hiking, mabye contakt them with your pland and see what they say. They are professional hikers that know routes/ usefull info etc.

    The Norwegian Trekking Association – your guide to Norwegian outdoor life https://share.google/iOJw4d3KZihQLJQCR

    Here is another hiking recorce

    Norge på Langs – Team Belgica https://share.google/GGk3DdUrELWSYe1eb

  8. Sorry we will not be walking the whole trip, mainly riding busses, trains, even rentals! I didn’t know there was a difference between backpacking and travel backpacking 😅

  9. TheTomatoes2 on

    A bit off topic but I don’t recommend using Apple Maps in Norway (outside the US, tbf). It’s very out of date compared to Google or Waze. I had to force a friend to stop using it after we got stuck several times. Very frustrating.

    Plus it uses Yelp for business reviews.

  10. ProgressOk3200 on

    Around Tromsø the risk for avalanche can be huge during March/April. So you have to use [varsom.no](http://varsom.no) to see if your hiking trip is possible when you want to take it. Tourists get trapped in avalanches every year in the Tromsø area and not all of them comes out of it alive. So be careful when hiking.

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