Tuesday 31.12.2013, my last day in Luleå.
Toward evening we prepared some food and headed to other building where majority of students who were staying here over holidays gathered. Again there was lots of food from all over the world, tons of people who I never saw before, or at least talked with them.
Toward 11PM we left apartment and took bus downtown. It was around -7 outside and snowing quite strongly. Yet to my surprise there were really a lot of (young) people (girls) dressed in miniskirts, wearing high heels. I don’t know how they weren’t cold or how their feet didn’t froze, since there was at least 5cm of fresh snow on the ground.
There was no stage or band in city centre as usually in Slovenia. Instead of this there were 3 stalls selling some drinks and sweets and that was it. After following crowd few meters we found a place where they were going to shoot fireworks from. Guess where? From the middle of harbour on almost half a meter of frozen sea.
A lot of people gathered to watch fireworks. Although you could tell you’re not in Slovenia since everyone made sure to have enough personal space around them.
We soon found a nice place to view fireworks from. Just at the edge of pier looking directly onto the sea. After counting backwards from 10 to 0 fireworks started at midnight sharp.
Fireworks were amazing. They were big, colourful and close, I even got hit by shrapnel which somehow made it underneath my shirt. All in all it was amazing.
After it Veronika and I decided to go home alone, since we had a busy day in front of us. We went by foot, my last hike here in Luleå. We had a plan to go over the frozen lake, snow was falling really hard by now, a great last memory to have!
After waking up following morning we ate something and began to clean apartment. When we were done it was already time to go. We said goodbye to our friends and were off on bus. It was sad, driving by the lakes and paths I’ve grown so used to in the last half a year. By the time we came to the rail station I already started to miss this place…
Being so warm lately I was a bit worried about skating over the lakes, although I think the ice must have been more than 30cm deep. But still it’s not easy to go on a lake when you see water all around (upper layers of ice melt, while below there is thick layer of solid ice still). So we decided to go to a hockey arena which is open for public (free) multiple times per week.
Veronika did surprisingly good job on skates, she didn’t even fall despite me being prepared to capture the moment on my camera. 🙁 Too bad we didn’t have time to try out hockey.
On Monday there was hockey match in the arena next door. We decided to go and see it. We bought the cheapest “sits”. We were actually standing and not sitting, later on it proved to be a good decision. During the game while all the swedes on the sits were just sitting and maybe clapping from time to time, here on stands people were actually yelling and cheering for Luleå team.
This was the first time I (we) saw hockey game in real life (not on TV). It was really good, fast and exciting. Lulea team is one of the best teams in Sweden, and Sweden if I’m not mistaken won World (or something) cup last year, so we really were watching a good game.
It was Saturday morning, a bit over half past 4, pitch black and snowing. We were about to go on an adventure, to a land where night lasts for entire month. We were about to go to Enontekiö, Finland, about 200km above Arctic Circle and around 500km away from Lulea. To do so, we rented a car and I was designated driver (the joy).
The car was brand new (only 4000 km), slightly modified for artic winters up here, it had metal spikes impelled into tires, external heating of engine and cabin which you plug into electricity socket (in parking spot), steering wheel and seat heating.
The roads up here are not entirely cleared of snow, there is always 2 or 3 cm of compacted snow on them. This, combined with warm weather we had lately, led to a road that was made of ice. The first hour of driving was like a rollercoaster. I was full of adrenalin as the car was sliding everywhere all the time, breaking distance was 5 times longer and I couldn’t see anything because of darkness and snow. Yet it was somehow fun, a new experience, nothing like I’ve done before.
I remember few years ago when I was driving home from Ljubljana (capital of Slovenia – where I’m studying), there was unexpected snowfall and traffic slowed down to a crawl, even thought there was no snow sticking to the road. Here you would think people would drive slower because of all the snow, ice and darkness… well think again, I was overtaken by a truck when I was going 80km/h on a highway.
After an hour of driving I got a bit more used to everything and I was able to drive at cruising speed of 100km/h on a something that could be said highway. Highway here is basically just a wider road, it still has only one lane on each side (like normal road), though you can’t really tell the lanes because of all the snow on it. Sometimes when there is a hill, the side that goes up gets additional lane. Even so usually you drive somewhere in the middle and when you see a car in the opposite side you move more toward the edge. Because of the darkness you spot a car kilometres away so it is relatively safe. What about the curves? Well the land is almost flat so there are almost no curves.
After 2 hours of driving we reached Finland border and soon after crossed Artic Circle.
We continued north in American style (turn right in 250km). To my big surprise environment was getting brighter. Because of all the snow and clouds (it was a snowy day) the light reflects quite a lot even though the sun is nowhere near horizon up there, beyond Artic Circle.
With the help of camera’s high sensitivity we were able to take few shots of the road. Try to find road here, and mind yourself, we were going 100km/h here and it was darker than it looks.
After long 6 hours of driving and only 1 stop we reached our destination.
The huskie farm was large, around 120 dogs. Besides us there was an American family that was scheduled for a safari at the same time. That meant we were going on 4 sledges. Each sledge was pulled by 6 dogs, one person was sitting on it and one was driving. Yes you heard me right, we were actually driving the dogs.
After not so quick briefing, I was first to drive our (mine and Veronika’s) sledge. Start was surprisingly fast, followed by around 10km/h pace for around 5km over snowy tundra and frozen lakes.
Ride was a joy. Dogs knew the route by hart and we had little to no steering to worry about. The thing we had to regulate more frequently was speed. This was done by stepping on step-on break, which increased drag on snow, slowing the sledge down. In turns we had to be careful to tilt in the correct way, to prevent sledge from tipping.
On half way we stopped for tea and Finnish biscuits. After that we changed drivers and continued toward home over a different route. This time I was sitting on the sledge so I was able to take more photos. Sadly it was already dark by then so I wasn’t able to take any good ones.
Just before reaching kennel again dogs speeded up again. Breaking didn’t help and we just flew through last corners almost tipping over.
Despite being novice drivers we did a good job. We didn’t overturn, I only got hit by a few branches, we caught the sledge ahead of us and got caught by the team behind us. Haha we also had an accident when the dogs behind us overtook us, haha let’s just leave it at this.
After we arrived we helped feed the dogs and put them in their cages. Here I found a dog with a name which sounded familiarly.
Whole trip lasted for about 3 hours and was one of the best things I’ve done up here. It was worth 12 hours of driving, thankfully car had very good gas/km ratio so we didn’t spent fortune on gas, here in Sweden it’s little below 2€/l. The car, even with winter tires with spikes and driving on snow, had an average of 4.2l per 100km consumption.
At campus we also have a house of technology; museum like house about technology, mainly used in mining. It is meant for kids, as you can try and drive almost everything, but it is free for students of LTU so we used a chance and saw it.
There you get a chance to learn everything about satellites, planes, mining, trains… The best part is that you can play with it. For example you make waves in a water to start “wave electrical plant” and lit up light bulb. Another example is when you put rocks in water to change current of water to help you lift a weight connected to water mill.
We even got a chance to lift logs with a real bulldozer (ok I don’t know real name of it, but it was the real one). And we got a chance to make our own paper.
All in all it was a fun and educational day, the only thing that was weird was that we were surrounded by kids and probably looked like idiots :D.