Travel Blogs - Since 1997
Free Travel Blog Join for Free! Sign in FAQ Advanced Newest
Home
Destinations
Our Travelers
Forums
Flights
Hotels
Cars
Hostels
Tours
Travel Insurance
46,226 travel experiences from 162 countries shared this week Find travelers near you Who's in
Longyearbyen Travel Deals
Find Travel Deals on Smartfares
Low Fares Made Easy. Book Today!
smartfares.com/traveldeals
Sponsored Links

Longyearbyen, the solitary Norwegian town


Destinations > Europe > Norway > Longyearbyen > Travel Blog: Svalbard - 78º North > Longyearbyen, the solitary Norwegian town


beagui
about Beagui

Send a message
Subscribe to this Travel Blog Get email updates
Unsubscribe Unsubscribe
Print Entire Travel Blog Print travel blog
Bookmark this page Bookmark
Beagui's TravelStream™

Create a FREE Travel Blog - Join TravelPod! Longyearbyen Hotels


Beagui's travel blogs:

About This Travel Blog
Entries (8)
Guestbook (0)
 



Svalbard - 78º North

Table of contents

1 vote rate it
Visitors: 281 - 29 this month

Cruise with the Stockholm - Next Entry

Longyearbyen, the solitary Norwegian town

,
Flag of Norway
Friday, Aug 01, 2003  12:02

Entry 1 of 8 | show all | print this entry
View all photos & videos  View as slideshow


Polar night
Polar night

Guillermo with
difficulties
Guillermo with difficulties

Guille stuck to
the ice
Guille stuck to the ice

Show all 36 thumbnails

Longyearbyen was the first place where we really lived far from our families (quite far indeed, more than 4400 km away). It was a wise choice to start with such a difficult trip, because this would contribute to make easier the following experiences. Longyearbyen is special in many different ways. To start with something, it has a difficult access; it is only reachable by plane during the winter (with the subsequent problems for the supply of fresh food) and boat during summer time, beacause the fjord remains frozen a big part of the year.
It is supposed to be a mining town (1700 inhabitants), but its coal mining related activities are decreasing in favour of others as tourism and scientific research (being Svalbard a natural outdoor laboratory to test many important facts as the magnitude of the global climate change).

As students of science there we assisted to UNIS, the University Centre in Svalbard, which is the northernmost University campus in the world. It has a high quality of teaching as well, and access to important research facilities open to every single student. Due to its consideration as a key activity to maintain the healthy life of Longyearbyen, political centre of Svalbard as a Norwegian territory, the University receives a priority treatment even compared to other Norwegian Universities, in topics like budget, internationalization, and material resources. This allowed us to enjoy a whole undergraduate course on Arctic Geology without paying fees, including activities such as marine geology cruises in upper class Research Vessels, and field trips in snowscooters. The accommodation provided by UNIS is superb too. At reasonable prices, you can live in student barracks with an individual room per person, a bathroom shared with one more student and a kitchen for every seven students. This means a good mix of private and social life.

The life in Longyearbyen, though attractive, can be difficult sometimes too. Its latitude (78ºN) means three months of polar night, with no lights in the horizon (what we got used to easily), and three of midnight sun (what was not so easy to get along well with). Of course, the temperatures are quite low, reaching -35ºC in wintertime and very rarely going above +10ºC during the summer. You'd better buy warm clothes if planning to go to Svalbard. The other inconvenient you might encounter there is the presence of Polar Bears, which sometimes may cross the town. Thus, every single student is obliged to follow and pass a Safety Course that teaches you how to deal with cold, glacier crevasses, polar bears (with a shooting practice included), survival suits in case of falling to the water during cruises, radio communications, GPS orientation, and other activities. But maybe the hardest (or the best?) thing in Longyearbyen is the relative isolation. There are no roads in Svalbard to connect different human settlements, and when you get out of the town you have to carry with you a signal gun and a rifle.

Apart from all that, the life of Longyearbyen is quiet and peaceful. It has its own hospital, sports centre, shopping centre (called Svalbarbutikken), primary and secondary school, church, and many funny outdoors and indoors activities (our level of skiing improved so much there...although it was not very high before). It is located in the lower part of a valley that has two glaciers (Longyearbreen and Larsbreen that allow you to enjoy in its moraine and ice caves) in its upper part, and has a waterfront in the Adventdalen fjord. Many visitors, as reindeers and polar foxes, can be seen walking freely through the valley (in spite of the omnipresent menace of hunters, who luckily are not allowed to carry loaded weapons inside the town). We enjoyed the benefits of the Longyearbyen community, making friends not only among students but especially among other inhabitants in town (our beloved Hilde and Sigve, who later on came to Madrid to visit us for a few days). But we have to make a special mention of one of our favourite phenomena in Svalbard, the Northern Lights, which we had never seen before and captivated our senses in a way only few things have done after that.

In conclusion, Longyearbyen is one of the strongest experiences we have had, and we would recommend it to anybody who has the chance to go.




Where I stayed:
Brakke 13, Student Residence, Nybyen
 
Latest Comments (0)

be the first to post a comment
If you like this entry, search for other entries by beagui, from or try a new search.
Previous Entry
Go to top of page
Cruise with the Stockholm

 
Table of Contents
1 - 8

1.Longyearbyen, the solitary Norwegian town - Longyearbyen, Norway Aug 01, 2003 ( This entry has 36 photos 36 )
2.Cruise with the Stockholm - None (Seaside), Norway Aug 08, 2003 ( This entry has 17 photos 17 )
3.Accident in the Glaciology Course!!! - None (Countryside), Norway Feb 26, 2004 ( This entry has 9 photos 9 )
4.Gruvefjellet hillside, Sarkofagen and Moraine Cave - None (Countryside), Norway Mar 07, 2004 ( This entry has 20 photos 20 )
5.Nordenskjöld - Nordensköld, Norway Mar 21, 2004 ( This entry has 12 photos 12 )
6.Plateau Berget - None (Countryside), Norway Apr 05, 2004 ( This entry has 7 photos 7 )
7.Gruvefjellet, the snow avalanche - None (Countryside), Norway Apr 06, 2004 ( This entry has 16 photos 16 )
8.Marine geology cruise (Greenland & Barents' Seas) - None (Seaside), Norway May 04, 2004 ( This entry has 14 photos 14 )

1 - 8

Back to Entry - Back to Home






Explore Longyearbyen, Norway
Travel Blogs
Svalbard by markjenner
Reindeers by beagui
Forum Discussions

none yet

Photos and Videos
Reindeers (10 Reindeers (8
At UNIS... studying Iced bike
Polar night Svalbard Limmo
Hotels in Longyearbyen

 

Longyearbyen Travel Blogs (6)
Norway Travel Blogs (481)
Longyearbyen Forum Discussions (0)
Norway Forum Discussions (50)
Longyearbyen Photos and Videos (72)
Norway Photos (5,000)
Longyearbyen Hotels (4)

 



Africa | Asia | Australasia | Europe | Middle East | North America | South America | Central America | Caribbean
Home | Toolbar | Store | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | About | FAQ | Jobs | Contact Us
Copyright © 1997 - 2008 TravelPod.com, a proud founder of travel blogs on the web. All Rights Reserved.