Cross country skiing is our thing, if possible right out the door and go! Slalom, Snowboarding was a sideeffect, but because of snow, we got pretty good at it as well☺
I live in Lillehammer and no, we dont know each other. We know some loakle pokaler (city classics) but the town is a tourist and student hub. It is a influx and rotation of people all the time. And the surounding farmtowns use Lillehammer as a shopping center as well.
Yes, the churches you are thinking of are called stave churches. But not all churches similar on the outside are stave churches (like the red church you saw in another video from Lofoten - which is not a stave church). Ordinary laft is a wall construction of horizontal timber, where the logs are laid with the root and top end alternately to each side and held in place by joining in the corners of the house. Stave laft, on the other hand, are built by first laying a bottom log of timber. A truss is then set up, and staves (rough vertical panels) are inserted at full floor height between rough studs in each corner, and some in between. A new frame is inserted on top of the staves, corresponding to the bottom frame. The end gables at the top are made of ordinary edged timber. Buildings with both ordinary laft as well as stave laft are still built in Norway today, usually cabins. When using stave laft you can build taller buildings, but there are also small stave churches on one floor with a small tower in Norway. You can't necessarily tell from the outside if a building is built with stave laft. Ordinary laft will sink with time, so it is not suitable for buildings that are too tall. I live in a 225-year-old ordinary lafted timber house. The outer walls have slowly become lower because the timber has sunk together, about 20 cm in relation to the house's chimney. Paint made of cod liver oil was most common along the coast. I would think linseed oil was more common in Lillehammer, but I don't know for sure.
Cross country skiing is our thing, if possible right out the door and go! Slalom, Snowboarding was a sideeffect, but because of snow, we got pretty good at it as well☺
There was a norwegean series called 'Lilyhammer' with little Steven as an actor, great💘
I live in Lillehammer and no, we dont know each other.
We know some loakle pokaler (city classics) but the town is a tourist and student hub. It is a influx and rotation of people all the time. And the surounding farmtowns use Lillehammer as a shopping center as well.
Yes, the churches you are thinking of are called stave churches. But not all churches similar on the outside are stave churches (like the red church you saw in another video from Lofoten - which is not a stave church).
Ordinary laft is a wall construction of horizontal timber, where the logs are laid with the root and top end alternately to each side and held in place by joining in the corners of the house. Stave laft, on the other hand, are built by first laying a bottom log of timber. A truss is then set up, and staves (rough vertical panels) are inserted at full floor height between rough studs in each corner, and some in between. A new frame is inserted on top of the staves, corresponding to the bottom frame. The end gables at the top are made of ordinary edged timber.
Buildings with both ordinary laft as well as stave laft are still built in Norway today, usually cabins. When using stave laft you can build taller buildings, but there are also small stave churches on one floor with a small tower in Norway. You can't necessarily tell from the outside if a building is built with stave laft.
Ordinary laft will sink with time, so it is not suitable for buildings that are too tall. I live in a 225-year-old ordinary lafted timber house. The outer walls have slowly become lower because the timber has sunk together, about 20 cm in relation to the house's chimney.
Paint made of cod liver oil was most common along the coast. I would think linseed oil was more common in Lillehammer, but I don't know for sure.
I like the beard and Nordic deep voice haha
Can you do one on norweigen folktales?
missed I Maihaugen museum?
Do they know why Lillehammer was chosen for the Olympics? What year or how many years?
What’s the churches called?