Saltstraumen - One of the world's strongest tidal currents

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  • Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
  • Saltstraumen is one of the world's strongest tidal currents. A perfect place to go diving, fishing and admiring the power of nature. 1 hour drive outside Bodø, Norway

Комментарии • 118

  • @RWBHere
    @RWBHere 2 года назад +101

    This has to be the most effective video of the Saltstraumen that I've seen. Thank-you for letting us hear the water, and not some awful music!

  • @ejohnso1967
    @ejohnso1967 Год назад +10

    Wow... the power and beauty of the ocean there is just incredible!

  • @royfearn4345
    @royfearn4345 Год назад +8

    That looks bloody dangerous! The Strid on steroids.

  • @BigmanHaus
    @BigmanHaus 3 года назад +19

    These are absolutely beautiful videos. Great footage!

  • @beatricetkintlambinet7500
    @beatricetkintlambinet7500 Год назад +3

    Nous avons eu l’occasion d’y aller et le voir 3 fois déjà. C’est toujours aussi impressionnant

  • @rowgli
    @rowgli Год назад +6

    Looks like there is vortex shedding going on there on a massive scale.

  • @TheMichaelBeck
    @TheMichaelBeck Год назад +20

    Seems like a great place for water turbines. Free electricity! As a licenced drone operator let's give a hand to the person than shot this awesome video. ✌

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад +4

      I filmed it several years ago, the area is a protected national park and will NEVER be developed. Here in Norway, most electricity comes from hydropower (from mountains). Building out this place,is a bad deal and will never be accepted by local people

    • @TheMichaelBeck
      @TheMichaelBeck Год назад +1

      @@vegarhl If it's a protected area, by all means keep it pristine. Cheers from America!

    • @paradiselost9946
      @paradiselost9946 Год назад

      besides the leave it alone factor, it doesnt work like that.
      to get any work from the water means you have to slow it down.
      as soon as you slow it down its not as impressive anymore. you are restricting the flow. the whole reason it exists is because the flow is restricted. restrict it more and all you do is reduce the flow.
      you can restrict flow to the point you get... a dam. a dam doesnt produce any power. its the dam draining through a restriction producing the power. the sweet spot is when the water flows at half the velocity it would otherwise flow at through that restriction. its doing the maximum work on your load... generator... grain mill... water pump... air compressor... you cant get any better than that.
      why does it always have to be "electricity"?

    • @user-yq6ov6ow7l
      @user-yq6ov6ow7l Год назад

      The energy contained in this water current is laughable compared to the energy from a hydroelectric damn. It is a terrible location for hydroelectric power.
      Hydro power is all about water pressure from water depth. You have water coming from somewhere high to somewhere low.

  • @dougdavis8986
    @dougdavis8986 Год назад +7

    It would be fun to do a drift dove through there to see what the currents are like below.

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад +10

      When the current turns, you have about 1 hour to dive in the current. It never comes to a full stop, but is like diving into a river full of life. Have several dives there myself.

    • @petersieben8560
      @petersieben8560 Год назад +2

      @@vegarhl jeeeez, you must be brave, man ... !

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад +14

      @@petersieben8560 Saltstraumen is well known as a main destination for many divers, you should have knowledge, experience and a diver that now the place . But otherwise no "big" problems to diving there. When the current turns, it's like diving in a river at 1 to 3 knots. But the current can reach close to 20 knots at most (normally 10 to 13 knots) .So you dont won't be there at the wrong time and place, then it will be a "fuck around and find out" shit 😆

  • @ronsamson537
    @ronsamson537 Год назад +2

    Such an amazing location for generating hydro power. Doubt it will ever happen for environmental, ecological or tourism reasons, but it would be amazingly effective.

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад

      The place Is a national park , and will never be built a power station there. We don't need it , we have a lot of hydro electrical power here northern Norway. More than we can use or send to other places.

    • @ronsamson537
      @ronsamson537 Год назад

      @@vegarhl Uhh, ya. Did you miss the part where I said it will never happen because of environmental, ecological or tourism reasons? That's basically what a national park is. Its a place where most industry gets banned because of those reasons.
      I live in central Canada. We have wind and solar farms, but no where near enough to meet demand and the widest body of flowing water to be found in 500 km is less than 15 meters wide and moves at a staggering pace of about 0.4 meters per second. Possibly as fast 3 mps during the spring thaw.
      Hydro power just isn't possible anywhere near where I live, so its something that I personally find fascinating.

  • @hreader
    @hreader Год назад +3

    Is this where Edgar Allan Poe got his inspiration for his short story 'Descent into the Maelstrom' from?

  • @paulknightley
    @paulknightley Год назад

    Cracking! Cool to see the Von Karmen vortex shedding

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад

      yes it is a lot of "power"

    • @zakelwe
      @zakelwe Год назад

      Is that Von Karmen vortex shedding though? The whirlpools are forming at the bridge which would suggest it is formed simply by the tide / current running into the funneling obstical of the rock. For Von Karmen vortex shedding the whirlpools would start to form behind the island where the flow of the two channels meets as it it flow around the obstical on both sides ???
      I am no expert though, what is for certain is that is a great video ... thanks vegarhl !

  • @freeanimals594
    @freeanimals594 Год назад +4

    You couldn't pay me enough to be on one of those boats! 😅 Drone footage...excellent! 🌊
    How tall is the bridge?

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад +2

      The bridge has a sail height of 41 metres, the boats are no problem. I live full-time in a sailboat further into the fjord, and go through the Saltstraumen when I go out to sea

    • @freeanimals594
      @freeanimals594 Год назад

      @@vegarhl 😎 I should also mention you couldn't pay me enough to live in Norway! 🤣
      Greetings from Florida USA! 🇺🇸

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад +1

      @@freeanimals594 Norway has its advantages, but undoubtedly its own in problems. We have a little too much "communist" thinking in many ways, and it has gotten worse in recent years. They said, i am very glad that I don't live in the US .The country is a slow sinking rat ship😆

    • @freeanimals594
      @freeanimals594 Год назад

      @vegar blix Holt I understand that! I believe mostly all countries on Earth are going down the drain, except of course, if you're one of the elite and can afford a way out, until death that is!
      BTW, I never go in the ocean here for many reasons. We live 13 miles from the Gulf. I'll stick with our pool!

    • @CjbrkBrooks
      @CjbrkBrooks Год назад

      @@freeanimals594. Good…you stay there where crime is rampant. I’ve had my cc data stolen every single time I’ve visited Florida…it was stolen by such upstanding people as gas station attendants, hotel check-in clerks, wait staff, etc. It seems like EVERYONE there is in to identity theft. You can keep that redneck state! (Went to hi school in Pensacola, and have only BAD memories of your “southern hospitality”).

  • @clarkewi
    @clarkewi Год назад +5

    You don't want to fall in.

  • @markmark2080
    @markmark2080 Год назад

    Amazing, thanks for posting...

  • @HonorTrees
    @HonorTrees Год назад

    Awesome dive spot.

  • @TheKatyPB
    @TheKatyPB Год назад

    Breathtaking.❤

  • @justinmorgan2126
    @justinmorgan2126 Год назад +4

    SO much energy potential there... why is it not being utilized? Too strong for the machines?

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад +4

      Norway has a lot of hydropower from the mountains, this is a national park and will hopefully never be developed for power or anything else

    • @savagemako17
      @savagemako17 Год назад +1

      @@vegarhl I wonder though, with this kind of tidal flow, if there are not some other similar area where the tides could be harnessed to create hydropower. Most of the gear to do this is out of sight, under water. This Saltstraumen has fascinated me for years. The bridge looks a bit sketchy though. I'm sure it's strong, but doesn't look like much.

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад +1

      @@savagemako17 The bridge is solid, built on rock and not in the sea. We have many places in Norway with a lot of with a lot of ocean currents, especially in northern Norway we have up to a 3.5 m height difference. But we have a lot of hydropower plants from the mountains, which are easier and cheaper to build / maintain. Have yet to hear about the use of tides for power production in Norway, and i do not think it will be necessary anytime soon. i just hope places like Saltstraumen can be left in alone, and not be destroyed by greedy developers as we see in other countries. We already have a "war" between politicians who want windmills and the people who can't stand them.

    • @savagemako17
      @savagemako17 Год назад +1

      @@vegarhl Thank you for the reply. As I said, the Saltstraumen for me has always been a beautiful but scary and I'm sure can be deadly! I hope it always remains as it is today. I love the entire setting with a fascinating little village, I'd like to visit one day. I've seen the fish that are pulled out of there and I've seen videos of people diving there. There are crazy rock formations under the surface where you can see the erosion from the currents and sand/pebbles. This explains some of the boiling water above. A very magical place. I'm a US citizen and can tell you first hand, NEVER let any US developers near your land or your country, if you want to keep nice things nice.

  • @RickySpanish168
    @RickySpanish168 3 года назад +3

    jesus christ that is absolutely insane. just imagine falling in...

    • @dunruden9720
      @dunruden9720 3 года назад +3

      Wait six hours and you get washed back in! 😁

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  2 года назад +2

      You can dive when the current turns, the current is never at rest so you should have some experience. Have dived there many times myself

  • @tenbear5
    @tenbear5 Год назад

    Impressive!

  • @romeowhiskey1146
    @romeowhiskey1146 Год назад

    Thanks. Now up on CURRENT events.

  • @sharonholdren7588
    @sharonholdren7588 Год назад

    Couldn't you add a little explanation of where and why? This blows my mind, but I am no further enlightenef than I was 3+ minutes ago.

  • @streetracer2321
    @streetracer2321 Год назад

    Yeah this looks pretty strong. Definitely better than the Tom Scott video where it’s just an ordinary inlet that he claims is somehow powerful.

  • @starpawsy
    @starpawsy Год назад

    THe most beautiful thing about this is the mutlilane concrete bridge carrying the high-speed motorway.

    • @bertilknudsen
      @bertilknudsen Год назад

      Well. each to his own.

    • @starpawsy
      @starpawsy Год назад

      @@bertilknudsen One day someone will invent a standard way to denote sarcasm.

  • @mikeyhyzer8321
    @mikeyhyzer8321 Год назад

    Just wow.

  • @streamofconsciousness5826
    @streamofconsciousness5826 Год назад +1

    The trail of the boat lasted long enough that it was like you imprinted it in a solid.
    My ears are popping even with the sound off. That's a lot of mass moving very fast.

  • @marcschmidt7846
    @marcschmidt7846 Год назад

    These sheer powers should be used to gain energy!

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад

      The area is a protected national park and will NEVER be developed. Here in Norway, most electricity comes from hydropower (from mountains). Building out this place,is a bad deal and will never be accepted by local people

    • @marcschmidt7846
      @marcschmidt7846 Год назад

      @@vegarhl okay, I did not know this. Thanx for the information.

  • @cheetabis
    @cheetabis Год назад

    when the boat's motor stops in the middle of this river

  • @TairnKA
    @TairnKA Год назад

    What's the difference from an average low to high tide?

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад

      Normally about 2.5 to 3.5 meters +- but can be as much as close to 4 meters under special conditions

  • @mariamariscal5616
    @mariamariscal5616 Год назад

    Que miedo , impresionante

  • @joemeeker5211
    @joemeeker5211 Год назад

    A perfect place to go diving, are you serious?

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад

      The current turns every 12 hours, at its strongest the current is 20 to 24 knots, but at its weakest around 1 to 3 knots (45-60 minutes) and it is like diving in a "river" but in the sea. Have many dives there myself ,and there are many film clips from there online

  • @richbrown9690
    @richbrown9690 Год назад

    It's a no from me lol who on earth would get in a little boat on that kind of torrent :O

  • @nibiruresearch
    @nibiruresearch Год назад

    The best place to generate electricity with propellers in the water.

  • @randellgribben9772
    @randellgribben9772 Год назад +1

    diving?????

  • @christinegerard4974
    @christinegerard4974 Год назад

    Real thalassotherapy !

  • @Fred-xh9ls
    @Fred-xh9ls Год назад

    impressive but mild compared to others

  • @seananderson6269
    @seananderson6269 2 года назад +1

    If you fall in you'll end up on someone's fishing hook 😀

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  2 года назад +2

      Yes unfortunately there are lots of fishing hooks and lines down there. Bodø diving club is there often and picks up several 100 kilos a year, but it is a losing battle :(

  • @John-nl4lt
    @John-nl4lt Год назад

    Be nice in a rubber tube 😂

  • @debbie960
    @debbie960 Год назад +6

    It's such a pretty color! Awesome video😊

  • @nadjahlover
    @nadjahlover Год назад +5

    Terrifyingly beautiful.

  • @hamishclayton347
    @hamishclayton347 Год назад +7

    Impressive. In Broome, Western Australia there is a similar tidal flow. I never get bored of watching huge amounts of water move this way 😮

    • @Asesinathegamer
      @Asesinathegamer Год назад

      This sounds great 👍 Can you make a video of it please? This would be so cool 👍

    • @hamishclayton347
      @hamishclayton347 Год назад

      @@Asesinathegamer G’day dude, I could do that but it would involve some long travel to get there, you see I live on the east coast of Australia and Broome is in the north west of the country, around 4500 km away from me and across several deserts. Alternatively, here’s a link to a clip from a BBC documentary narrated by Sir David Attenborough explaining the tidal flows in Broome 👍 ruclips.net/video/mJ9kdhVJT0U/видео.html

    • @Asesinathegamer
      @Asesinathegamer Год назад +1

      @hamishclayton347 thanks for the link. Sorry, I didn't know that you live on the other side of Australia.

    • @hamishclayton347
      @hamishclayton347 Год назад

      @@Asesinathegamer all good mate 🤙🏻

  • @captainsirjackchucklebutty6147
    @captainsirjackchucklebutty6147 Год назад +2

    We actually mounted a sea kayak expedition to the Lofoten Islands including 2 days playing in this in about 1978 was it? We were student teachers of Outdoor Education at Bede College, Durham and had circumnavigated Ireland the previous year. Great experience in organising expeditions,a great trip, and I did end up getting an OE job eventually. Thanks for filming this and posting. Technology is wonderful nowadays. I wish we had had anything better than an Instamatic in a Plastic Bag

  • @12knots
    @12knots Год назад +3

    Never heard of this! Thank you!

  • @jeannehurdel2996
    @jeannehurdel2996 Год назад +1

    I can almost smell the sea air.

  • @GWAYGWAY1
    @GWAYGWAY1 Год назад +1

    Power generator would work there , it is like the Menai straights.

  • @karkasselebordelais4266
    @karkasselebordelais4266 Год назад +1

    All That power lost…

  • @wevertonluiz1120
    @wevertonluiz1120 Год назад +2

    A natureza é uma artista incrível, incomparável!

  • @petalss5325
    @petalss5325 Год назад +1

    Wow I wish the video was longer.. It's amazing

  • @paradiselost9946
    @paradiselost9946 Год назад

    i wish someone would drop a few cameras down in sealed bubbles...
    make em neutrally bouyant. throw in a co2 bulb and pop it after a time delay, so they come to the surface afterwards.
    hit me up! seems like an easy enough thing to make.
    just um... need a few dollars for materials :)

  • @darrellcook8253
    @darrellcook8253 Год назад +5

    I'd like to see the bottom where its constantly scoured by the currents.
    If it's a tidal flow does that mean that it reverses? How's the fishing? And the underwater life?
    There has to be some interesting mutations in most everything in that kind of environment.

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад +7

      yes there are tides that go in and out. Here the tide leaves the fjord. Underwater there is a rich wildlife and kelp forest, it is possible to dive there for about 1 hour when the current turns, it is never still so it is like diving in a river with 1 to 3 knots of current. I Have dived there several times myself

    • @rizkyadiyanto7922
      @rizkyadiyanto7922 Год назад +2

      @@vegarhl sounds awesome. maybe you can record it next time you dive.

  • @tanksouth
    @tanksouth Год назад

    The God of angel armies made that.

  • @kalisteau
    @kalisteau Год назад

    what is under the water curious

  • @HansDunkelberg1
    @HansDunkelberg1 2 месяца назад

    Very good imagery!

  • @xyzct
    @xyzct Год назад

    Von Karman approved.

  • @abrahamdozer6273
    @abrahamdozer6273 Год назад

    You can see tidal bores like that on the Bay of Fundy between New Brunswick and Nova Scotia in Canada. There are a few narrows where the tide "venturies" between rocky headlands. One that looks as severe as this one is in the harbour of a town called Westport on the Brier Neck, Nova Scotia.

  • @josephinebennington7247
    @josephinebennington7247 Год назад

    What did one Saltstraumen water molecule say to the other as the tide changed?…….”here we go again…sigh…”

  • @freedomforever6718
    @freedomforever6718 Год назад

    The water is crystal clear so the rocks underneath must be scrubbed clean.

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад

      Especially in winter, we can have good visibility. The whole area is full of wildlife and is covered by large fine kelp forests. A lot of nourishment in waters here that come with the current , vs other more open areas

  • @drive9997
    @drive9997 Год назад

    Spooky

  • @outcastoffoolgara
    @outcastoffoolgara Год назад

    Thanks but I am certain I would not be diving in that.

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад

      Then you lose a good dive ;) If you dive when the current turns and with local knowledge, then there is a problem for most people diving here. But would not recommend diving, when the current is like in the video

  • @kymcha
    @kymcha Год назад

    Tame compared to the horizontal falls in Western Australia.

  • @missjohnson2346
    @missjohnson2346 Год назад

    An example of small intestine meets large intestine dookie purge

  • @apistosig4173
    @apistosig4173 Год назад

    An ideal place to say goodbye to the world me thinks!

  • @YouAlreadyKnowBabi
    @YouAlreadyKnowBabi Месяц назад

    How fucked are you if you fall into that part of the river?

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Месяц назад

      It is not a river , it is the sea. We go diving there , but at the right time. If you fall in at the fail time , you have a "problem" maps.app.goo.gl/8Jm4NWGUERMq5r5w8

    • @YouAlreadyKnowBabi
      @YouAlreadyKnowBabi Месяц назад +1

      @@vegarhl I appreciate the info! Thank you

  • @chuckfinley3152
    @chuckfinley3152 Год назад

    How the fishing lol

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад

      The fishing is good , but it also brings local problems, with contamination from lost fishing equipment. Local divers have for several years done clean-up operations. Something that can be a challenge in a place like this. I have even filled a 10 liter bucket with many kilos, just on a 30/40 minuts dive my selfe

  • @ashrevlution3456
    @ashrevlution3456 Год назад

    What material of rock is in the area. It must be incredibly strong to be constantly hit by those collosal forces every day.

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад

      Ordinary gray stone, most of the walls and bottom are covered by kelp forest and lots of underwater wildlife

  • @TwoonyHorned
    @TwoonyHorned Год назад

    So beautiful !

  • @Route439
    @Route439 Год назад

    🍥

  • @Jpgundarun
    @Jpgundarun Год назад +2

    This looks tame compared to some of the ones Ive seen in The Kimberly region of Australia.

  • @jebbroham1776
    @jebbroham1776 Год назад

    If you fell in that you'd have no chance.

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl  Год назад +3

      you will definitely have a bad day, but people have fallen in and survived when the current has been strong. +- 30 minutes before the current turns, you can dive there. i have dived there many times, it is a nature experience which is far in between

    • @vladnet4748
      @vladnet4748 Год назад

      ​@@vegarhl Это похоже на полноводные горные реки. Там есть две опасности - когда долго не даёт всплыть на поверхность до следующего вздоха воздуха и если под водой человек за что-то зацепиться или течением прижмёт к рельефу дна.

  • @nobullfake1169
    @nobullfake1169 Год назад

    That fake water noise is terrible

  • @mperlatti
    @mperlatti Год назад

    The failure to utilize tidal movements as an energy source is just mind boggling

  • @chriscamgemi368
    @chriscamgemi368 Год назад

    I’m serious oxygen in that water very rich she life in that area

  • @sickoftheshit
    @sickoftheshit Год назад +1

    That's incredible! I wouldn't want to fall in the water there! It's beautiful in a dangerous kind of way.