Chasing the Northern Lights in Norway

There’s no year better than this year to chase northern lights.
Chasing the Northern Lights in Norway
Northern lights aurora borealis in the night sky over beautiful lake landscape. Dreamstime/TCA
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Keep your jackets and mittens handy—even in the middle of the night.

We’re aboard Hurtigruten’s MS Trollfjord, flagship of the company’s Signature voyages, cruising up the Norwegian Coast, enduring biting winds and sub-zero temperatures in our quest to see the Northern Lights. Even on the coldest ski days, or in Antarctica, I’ve never worn so many layers.

The cold doesn’t deter any of the more than 250 people aboard. So anxious are guests to get photographs that the ship makes announcements—even in the middle of the night—when the Northern Lights are visible. They’ve flown in many cases more than 24 hours for the experience from 18 countries, including Australia, Malaysia, India, Singapore, as well as all over Europe. Americans are in the minority, it seems. Many are traveling with grown or nearly grown kids, though there is one family from London with a baby, all checking off a trip on their bucket list.

Sooner rather than later for Kim Plummer, traveling with her family from Australia. She explained she is being treated for breast cancer and has long wanted to see the Northern Lights. So here was the Plummer family, including mom and dad, three daughters ages 16 to 21, two boyfriends, and 16-year-old Phoebe’s good friend. Another plus: A white Christmas and plenty of fun in the snow for the Aussies.

While Grace Wong has loved the chase for the Northern Lights, as well as seeing them (a week until we see them), her granddaughter Isabelle Shee, 9, is much more excited about the snow since they live in Singapore where there isn’t any, she explained. “I made snow angels and threw snowballs at my mom,” she said giggling.

The sun is expected to reach the peak of its 11-year activity cycle this winter, which means more intense and frequent Northern Lights, prompting many to make this trip now. Scientists predict the Solar Maximum in 2024 and 2025 will result in the most frequent and impressive Northern Lights in more than a decade. The next Solar Maximum won’t be until 2036.

But for Norwegians, who live above the Arctic Circle where the sun doesn’t get above the horizon from November into mid-January, the Northern Lights are no big deal. “Honestly, we get more excited about thunderstorms that are rare here,” said Kira Caurp, one of our guides as we went dog sledding in Tromso, which boasts the world’s most northern university and big hospital, and is a hip, urban city whose history as a market center dates back to the late 18th century.

The Norwegian company Hurtigruten, in fact, offers a Northern Lights Promise: If they aren’t visible within sight of your ship during the auroral season, you will get a free Coastal Express voyage. (You can download the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration dashboard here telling you where and when you can see the sky’s most spectacular light show.) There are also summer voyages in the Land of the Midnight Sun. (Check Hurtigruten’s WAVE Season deals for winter and summer sailings, including up to 50 percent off for kids 15 and younger.)
Hurtigruten, the 130-year-old company credited with first bringing southern and northern Norway together by delivering mail, goods, and Norwegians, makes our adventure supremely comfortable. There are excursions—dogsledding, visiting the Sorrisniva Igloo Hotel, made of ice and decorated with larger-than-life ice sculptures, as well as an opportunity to snap photos at the North Cape monument, famously the most northernmost point of Europe reachable by Road. There’s also a quirky World War II museum in tiny Svolovaer, north of the Arctic Circle, and a chance to meet an indigenous Sami family who herd more than 1,000 reindeer.

Suite passengers (be forewarned that regular cabins are small, though there are plenty of comfortable lounge areas) are gifted wind and waterproof jackets, Norwegian sweaters and hats, though the shop on board has everything you might need, even spikes for the bottom of your boots to keep you from slipping on the ice. The all-Scandinavian staff can talk to guests knowledgeably about where we are going and what life is like above the Arctic Circle, like walking to school in the dark and jumping out of second-floor windows into deep snow. “I didn’t know any different,” said Hotel Director Jill Sandvik, who grew up in Honningsvag with just 2, 500 people and no daylight between Nov. 21 and early January.

For many, it is a culinary journey as well. The MS Trollfjord does a spectacular job showcasing Norwegian dishes available from local providers (halibut, herring, cod), local cheeses, dry-aged meats—complete with wine pairings (more than 50 choices available in Rost, the fine dining room on the ship ). Twenty-five are available in Flora and Brasserie Arran, inspired by the indigenous Sami people where the menu includes dry aged beef, reindeer stew, and dry-aged halibut, one of the most delicious dishes I’ve ever enjoyed. Arran is the Sami word for the fire at the heart of the teepee. “It’s storytelling through food,” suggested Eindride Lauritzen, the food and beverage manager who notes that every menu details the history of the dishes being served at that meal. There are also Coastal Kitchen demonstrations. (Who knew it was so easy to make Gravlax?).

Visitors don’t always appreciate that the Northern Lights can appear and disappear in moments, noted Ada Jerzyk, our expedition leader for the first half of our two-week journey past the Arctic Circle and then back down the coast to Bergen. “They can go from nothing to spectacular in moments.” That’s why she suggests guests be willing to jump out of bed in the middle of the night, jackets in hand.

Grace Wong, echoing others on board, was thrilled once she saw the Northern Lights two nights in a row. But just as important, she added, was sharing the experience in the Far North with her daughter and granddaughter.

“You have to be patient and there is stress,” she conceded, adding “The time together is worth it. … And the love grows.”

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Eileen Ogintz
Eileen Ogintz
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For more Taking the Kids, visit www.takingthekids.com and also follow TakingTheKids on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram where Eileen Ogintz welcomes your questions and comments. The Kid’s Guide to Philadelphia, the 13th in the kid’s guide series, was published in 2020, with The Kid’s Guide to Camping coming in 2021. (C)2022 Eileen Ogintz. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. ©2022 Eileen Ogintz. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.