(LONG read. Yeah, I don't write that
often any more, but when I do, you get a lot for your money)
This summer has been all about the
mountains. Less than a month ago, J and I roamed the ones around
Hemavan, and a week ago we drove up to Ritsem to hike around mount
Akka (also known as the Queen of Lapland). During the 5 days we were
there, not a single kilometre was run, but believe me: running was on
my mind very often. Keep reading and you'll soon see why.
Day 1: The drive up to Ritsem and
looking for a place to camp
It's not easy getting to Ritsem, the
little collection of Sami fisherman cabins by the lake Akkajaure. The
road there is long (around 430km) and the last part of it is narrow
and rough, the asphalt broken up by the harsh winter climate, its
side littered by huge stones that have plummeted from the cliffs
above. Also, suicidal reindeer hiding in the ditches, waiting until
you're almost close enough to hear their racing heartbeat before they
throw themselves at your 90 km- per hour speeding ton of metal.
Judging by the look it gave me before it trotted back into the
bushes, head held high, I was being unreasonable to brake and shout
obscenities at it.
I guess reindeer are not known for
their smarts. I mean, you don't see many of them graduating from
Harvard.
We had to wait for an hour before we
could get on the boat that would carry us across the lake and to
Änonjalme, the trail head of Padjelanta trail. The boat tour took a
little more than half an hour, but it was a pleasant tour: Mount Akka
looked very impressive, looming over us, surrounded by other
snow-clad tops.
Padjelanta trail is around 140 km long
and pretty easy to hike on. It seemed to attract lots of people, all
sorts of people, most of whom only went as far as the first cabin (a
couple km from Änonjalme). We continued over the shaky suspension
bridge that hangs over the raging river Vuojatädno.
Our goal was to
reach the Northern side of Akka and find a place to put up our tent
at the foot of the mountain. Then, the following day, we hoped to
climb up to the Hamberg glacier. We found what looked more like a
reindeer track and less like a trail veering off into a mountain
birch jungle, complete with mud, puddles and thick bushes our heavy
backpacks got caught into. After fighting nature for one kilometre,
we decided to give up on that goal and turn back to Padjelanta trail.
The trail was like a motorway compared
to the narrow track we had attempted to follow, complete with fellow
travellers having put up tents at strategic locations. After 10 km of
hiking with 10 kg on my back (and a long car journey), I was eager to
find such a strategic location. But it proved to be harder than we
thought. We needed to have access to water and a clearing big enough
for our three-man tent. We were also hoping to find such a place a
bit further into the woods so that we'd have some privacy, and some
protection from the elements in case the weather got bad. We had
taken a food break by a stream, and we briefly considered putting up
the tent there, but having people walking 2 meters past our tent
wouldn't do much for our illusion that we were in the wilderness.
We chose to walk on and get to the next
cabin, which was 15 km from the boat. About a kilometre before we got
there, we found the perfect camping place: a peninsula of land right
where two rivers meet, the rivers that divide the area into three
national parks. We had access to glacier water, blue and frothing. We
had trees around us that provided shelter and privacy. And the
reindeer poo that covered the whole area made for a really soft
surface to put the tent on. Not to mention a pleasure to clean the
tent afterwards.
Yeah. The last part was maybe not
ideal. But we had driven 430 km and walked 16. We just wanted to
sleep.
Day 2: Sarek national park
Sarek is pure wilderness. No cabins, no
trails. Just hikers and wild animals, which, fascinatingly enough,
never collide. The bears, lynx and huge moose that are the natural
inhabitants of this area kept well away.
We found a reindeer track and followed
that along the river Sjnjuvtjudisjåhkå (someone forgot to put some
vowels in there - surprisingly, I suspect that word is easier to
pronounce after a bottle of wine. Or maybe when noone is sober enough
to correct you). Despite the lack of official trail, it was mostly
pretty easy to hike there. We upset some long-tailed jaeger and
willow ptarmigan. The plover's mournful cries accompanied us the
whole way. We were hoping to get near Nijak, a sharp-looking top
10-12 km from the tent. Unfortunately, the weather took a turn for
the worse and we could hardly see our noses, let alone a top which by
now was surely hidden in the clouds.
We turned back, our clothes slowing
getting wet despite the rain gear. After a couple of kilometres, the
rain stopped, because of course it did. That's mountain weather for
you: unpredictable, always changing, fierce. We took a detour past a
hill that offered a great view of lake Vastenjaure and a reindeer
sighting. When we finally arrived back at the tent, we had hiked 20
km.
Day 3: Stora Sjöfallet national park
We were aching to put in some altitude kilometres, and since we couldn't get to Akka from where we were, we
aimed for the next best thing in the area: the 979-meter tall
mountain hill Sjnjuvtjudis (remember that word? How
could you forget). It wasn't a steep climb but our thighs still ached
pleasantly. The top was marked by a heap of stones littered with
reindeer antlers and offered a magnificent view over Akka's Western
tops, Akkajaure lake and the mountains Nijak and Kisuris.
As easy as it was to climb up, getting
down was hard. We thought walking around the whole hill would be a
great idea, but what we didn't take into consideration was the
weather (which turned foggy and rainy) and the thick bushes covering
large parts of the hillside. It was slow going, and it was mentally
tiresome to not be able to look around and judge how far we'd walked.
Thankfully, we had our GPS with us, telling us where we were. We
finally got back after 14 km and cooked some delicious couscous on
the stove. Well, not so delicious. But when you've spent the whole
day hiking, even paper tastes good.
Day 4: Padjelanta national park and the
way back
Just as we were finishing our coffee on
a cold morning after a dreary rainy night, J exclaimed: ”Look!”.
Not 15 meters from us, a young reindeer and its adult companion were
walking towards the river shore to drink some water. I hardly had
time to produce my camera before they spotted us and ran away.
The sun finally appeared, just in time
for our last-day hike into Padjelanta. The plan was to walk for 2-3
hours on the easy trail, saving our strength for the evening hike
back to the bridge. Conveniently enough, a Sami village lay 5 km from
our tent and we headed for it. The environment was almost surreal at
places, barren but for some beautiful mountain birches that struggled
to survive. The trail was undulating, taking us over sandy ridges and
past cool streams. All I could think of was how cool it would be to
run Padjelanta trail, maybe staying at the cabins at night. It
wouldn't take more than 6-7 days.
The last part of the hike cut through
low marshlands. The elusive cloudberries (also known as Norrland's
gold), going for 40 euro/kg in the supermarkets, were abundant here –
unfortunately not ripe enough to eat yet. That didn't stop us from
tasting a couple.
Back at the tent, we ate some couscous
and packed our things. The weather was still beautiful, the air
crispy but not cold enough to cool us down, the sky blue among the
scattered clouds. Akka and the surrounding mountains were revealed in
all their glory, with some fresh snow powdering the tops. We walked
in its shadow with our heavy backpacks on our shoulders, stopping to
admire the awe-inspiring glaciers slowly gliding down its sides.
We put up the tent by the suspension
bridge. We had to be at Änonjalme at 12 the following day to take
the boat back to Ritsem, and we still had 4 km to walk. Some dark
clouds seemed to be coming our way from the West, and we re-hydrated
our dehydrated dinner in a hurry. We indulged in a couple of
home-baked flapjacks for dessert. The dreaded storm turned out to be
nothing but a drizzle. We slept badly that night, knowing that the
alarm would go off at 6 the next morning.
Day 5: The journey back
We were very efficient with our
breakfast and packing routine, and we headed back to the boat at
8.30. We arrived there way too early, and, with nothing else to do,
we sat by the beach, cooling our feet in the icy lake. The mosquitoes
were almost outnumbered by the seagulls, but they were infinitely
more annoying as they buzzed in my ear. Good thing we had hats with
mosquito net on them.
The boat took us to the Vaisaluokta
cabin first before it turned back towards Ritsem. Our car was,
thankfully, still there when we got back. Some rainy weather was
waiting for us in Skellefteå, and the temperature had dropped to 8
degrees. It seemed like the mountain weather had followed us all the
way home.