im 22 years old and ive always loved being outside in nature. i have trouble with depression and social anxiety and have had it for a few years now. Being in nature helps alot and even seeing videos like this makes me feel less stressed. Sarek has been a dream of mine to visit. Thank you for sharing your journey across Sarek with us.
You're always welcome here. There are nice places in Jämtland too, you should definitely look it up. I hope you will find solace there. And don't go there in the winter unless you know what you're doing ;-)
Kvikkjokk where he started the hike had a whopping -46.8C this last winter! Considering they can get temps up over +30 to +35 in the summer it's an amazing temp span of 75-80 degrees :O
Hello 😊 Well, this is going to be my first comment on RUclips ever! But I just want to say, that I REALLY enjoyed this video, and that it brought a lot of amazing memories aflive. About 30 years ago I trekked Sarek 4 summers in a row, and at least one of them more or less followed your route, allthough in the opposite direction. I feel so lucky to have experienced this amazing nature. So: a big THANK YOU for a trip down memory lane. 😊👍👏 Hanne, Denmark
I've done Kungsleden (2018) and Padjelantaleden (2023), and in between two trips to more southern parts of the same mountain range (around Grövelsjön). This summer I will finally go to Sarek for a 10 day solo hike. Watching your beautiful video makes me just tingle with anticipation. Thanks for sharing it!
I've been fairly housebound due to health problems over the past few months (I'm 23) so I just want to say thanks for documenting and sharing your journey, it was a pleasure to watch.
Second time I’ve watched this, a great record of a great trip; hope to complete a similar route myself in the next year or two, have walked the northern part of the Kungsluden and all the Padjelanta Trail, but longing for the wilderness of Sarek. Hope you still adventuring 👍
Nice to follow your journey! Sarek’s tough and rewarding. I live in Norway not too far from this area, and visited Sarek twice in wintertime in the late 80s. In many ways easier to visit during the winter (walk on rivers instead of crossing them…) although of course winter has its own challenges. Thanks for the video!
Great video! I trekked through Sarek with 2 friends in 2015. It was such a beautiful landscape and great experience. I remember thinking: „I have to come back here every year“ yet didn‘t make it back since then. Your route is pretty interesting, we approached Sarek through Rappadalen/Skirfe and made our way through to Alggavagge/Padjelanta and then back to Kvikkjokk. We encountered a lot of traces of wildlife (elk, bear and wolves) and had the strongest / most surreal northern lights at night. I‘ll come back - maybe this time taking your route.
In addition to being my handsome doppelgänger, what a lovely trip! I've now added it to my list of places to go to. Thank you for hauling all that gear to show us what it's like. Cheers from the USA.
I was there in 2022 and to this day I cannot shake the imressions I had about myself, nature, and the beauty of it all. Will be back next year, hopefully-
Thank you very much for this splendid video, Gwilym. For many decades ago I did a similar long hike to Sarek, and then some years later, to Padjelanta. Both of those hikes took about 10 days each. So following your excellently documented video, I got many dear memories. You got a new subscriber from Finland. Wishing you and yours all the best, and many new adventures 💕
Stunning, thank you for making/posting this. Always say this part of Europe is like Scotland on steroids and great to see other people from the UK exploring it. It's hard to understand the vastness until there and then especially if you consider the run into Abisko National Park and then over the border into Ovra, Reisa and Stabbersdalen on the way upto Nordkapp. Great vlog really enyoyded it! The only thing i would say and not sure if you had one i'd always take a good bivy, as the winds can be savage up there and well to be fair the MSR would soon collapse. As for river crossings and more for your other viewers for larger rivers that are there just about as dangerous as it gets when solo, worth spending time to find the best crossing point (generally upstream), and don't wade into fast flowing water that's above the knee, so much safer with two people if you know the correct technique but yea walking poles or a good log vital to scout ahead. It's also worth scouting the crossing without the Bergan first to know not suddenly going to meet an underwater ledge with a bottomless drop (had it happen to me few times, especially on glacial rivers that carve over time deep channels in flood literally from 2 foot of fast flowing water to not being able to feel the bottom with 2 poles lasted together)! All the best - there is literally an endless amount of terrain up there, you could spend a lifetime and still find new sites to enjoy. Edit - sorry you probably got what i meant, but a bivy for an emergency shelter so can drop the tent and let the storm pass (there are some lightweight one's these days such as event/pertex, far cry from the goretex bags of 90's albeit not as durable).
My father did simular journey 2 week crossing Sarek in the winter late 70s with skies and walking, no phones or anything, just telling friends and hes mom where he would go and when expected to be back. He was however a scout leader, hunter and orienteer when he grew up so he was very good at reading and using maps. He was in very good physical shape however for me personaly i think the hardest part must be knowing that your are on your own, there is no calling for help with phones, just hope friends will call for help if he have been gone to far. But like he said i asked about that its all about really knowing yourself what you can do before you go on such a journey. You dont find out something like that during a journey, you need to test yourself with small steeps to build up a self-confidence that is based on testing your skills for real.
What a wonderful video! I especially appreciated that you describe the ups and downs of each day, and that you show your route so clearly on the map, including information on the distance you hiked each day.
It's weird how you hate it and then you love it. That area is the only place I'd like to revisit. Usually it's been there done that but that place keeps coming back to me. Hi from Finland.
Gwilym - I thoroughly enjoyed this. Thank you so much for uploading. You seem like quite a thoughtful individual, and I'm sure that this trip gave you plenty of time for introspection. The scenery really is something else. I love getting into nature but I'm not sure if I could stomach 10 days alone in the wilderness with no phone signal so, hats off to you
Watched a little bit of this video, every lunch time while at work. Just finished watching such an amazing adventure. Gwilym thankyou so much for sharing! Liked and Subscribers
APPLAUSE - that was a venture, on the fly video footage with an EXCELLENT post edit and narrative worthy of a much larger channel. Do you know what your start out backpack weight was as it looked really heavy? I would definitely like to see a load out video of the kit you used, what was useful, what was not, what you might change etc. You were lucky not to have been plagued by Mossies and Midges. Subbed based on this video.
Awesome video ! I hope i'll be able to do something like this someday ! Just a few questions, did you have an in-reach just in case ? and how heavy was your backpack ? Looks like you're a machine ! Good job !
I had no InReach - this was a conscious decision to magnify the wilderness experience. Of course I took other precautions for safety - left my plan with my wife and always had a contingency escape route in mind. Pack was about 25 to 30kg at the start.
I really liked this video! As a swede it's easy to forget just how wild my own country can be. I must compliment you on your pronunciation of the Sapmi names on the map. I lived up north (not this high up) for a year and I can't do much better with these tongue-twisters😄
Thanks you - I'm glad for that feedback. I did as much reserach as possible around how to pronounce the place names. Hopefully I didn't butcher them too much. I also chatted with a Swedish couple towards the end of my walk and they said that as Swedes they still struggle with the Sapmi names!
Great video! I stand in awe though at the amount of kit you are carrying. I started at Ritsem on Padjelanta and then onto the Priests' Trail last August and did so with not much more than 15kg to start with (6kg food). I was happy with that lighter load as I barely had enough strength left in the end to reach Duottar Mountain Station to call an ambulance heli due to a burst appendix (yes, shit happens - especially when you are in the place furthest away from a paved road in Sweden). The flight across Sarek was rather special though 😀 So, I am quite happy having taken on board some of the (ultra) light backpacking tips by Jorgen Johansson e.a.
Nice video! Good job. I've been relatively near Sarek during some of my fishing trips all over Northern Sweden but never trekked thru on these trails. I should really do that. Northern Sweden is such a great place for those who enjoy to spend time in nature, there's so much pristine and beautiful areas up there. And it helps that Sweden has great laws allowing for harvesting from nature and camping. It's a great place to spend summer:)
This brings back memories:-) Standing in northern Sweden trying to find a way across icy rivers... Oh the hours I've spend searching for the best crossing point. Great great great 16 days alone. Beautiful place. I'm going to Scotland twice this year, so any good ideas for hikes? As much wilderness as possible. Knoydart is an option, but anything else? And, what camera did you use in Sweden?
Thanks for sharing. Really enjoyed the production and your commentary. Planning my own Sarek experience this season so great input! One question though. Could you share some insight how you carried your camera bag (the one on your left hip). How did you fasten it and how was your experience carrying the bag like that? With kind regards Johan
But Gwilym, although you're out of contact after 8'50" , if you rolled an ankle surely you could set off your PLB ? They're so small these days and you can hire them at gear shops and gov. departments.
Nice with some mountain views. Been hiking north of sweden basicly all my life(since 6 now pushing 50) but never been to Sarek. Dont think i will end up there since i like to combine hiking with fishing and your not allowed to fish in that area.
Great effort! What a superb trip, and so nicely presented. Although you did not seem bothered by your pack, I'm wondering, for your next trip, if you couldn't save weight by slimming down on camera gear. A year or so ago I did something very similar, also alone, and got good film results (also on RUclips) with no more than a simple Sony compact camera and a solar panel (without integral, or any other, battery).
You seem to be a well-versed hiker. In your videos can you please urge people to clean up after them, and to not try these things without proper training/guide? As of late europeans come to these mountains to hike but most of them are underequipped and do not pick up their trash. These mountains are still home to many animals and the sami with their reindeers. A lot of news have sparked up in the last couple of years that travelers will not bring their trash with them home, and this is just left to stay in the mountains forever, or until local sami villagers pick this up and transport it with helicopter. There are also many cases of stranded hikers from central europe who have gotten lost. Then they have to call for an emergency helicopter, taking up valueable resources that sami and other locals need in order to survive. Good luck getting a helicopter to transport your food to the village when they are off rescuing people all the time.
Thanks for an entertaining movie - subscribed! Brings back memories from my 2022 Sarek hike (there's video on my channel in case you want to see some of the same landscapes like Luottolahko but in even worse weather 😂)
Thank you for sharing this epic journey! You keep the story flowing, great shots and it is a pleasure to watch! I know how much it takes extra to get all the shots, so well done for such a long hike! How much charge do you get from that solar panel during the day? I might need to get one myself! Keep it up and be safe 😊
Ecstatic the sun finally braved it's way thru to greet you. Fine eye and feel for capturing the true cold north trail,how desolate and lost an older traveler and reindeer must have felt...no one's got your back.To survive,you have to do it all...and you did.Kudos...there is a sadness when leaving the wilderness,part of you let's go what you really are,yet you long to embrace civilization and those you left behind.Honor both
For a one-man army production, this is superb! Beautiful landscape and well told. Give this man some support and give him a sub
Agreed and done. Great cinematic quality and a thoughtful narrative. Looking forward to watching more.
Agree
Seeing he only has 350 subs shocked me, would have thought he had 100k+
@@elje0ett881 now !
Nice video 👌👍
im 22 years old and ive always loved being outside in nature. i have trouble with depression and social anxiety and have had it for a few years now. Being in nature helps alot and even seeing videos like this makes me feel less stressed. Sarek has been a dream of mine to visit. Thank you for sharing your journey across Sarek with us.
You're always welcome here. There are nice places in Jämtland too, you should definitely look it up. I hope you will find solace there. And don't go there in the winter unless you know what you're doing ;-)
Kvikkjokk where he started the hike had a whopping -46.8C this last winter! Considering they can get temps up over +30 to +35 in the summer it's an amazing temp span of 75-80 degrees :O
Hello 😊
Well, this is going to be my first comment on RUclips ever! But I just want to say, that I REALLY enjoyed this video, and that it brought a lot of amazing memories aflive. About 30 years ago I trekked Sarek 4 summers in a row, and at least one of them more or less followed your route, allthough in the opposite direction.
I feel so lucky to have experienced this amazing nature.
So: a big THANK YOU for a trip down memory lane. 😊👍👏
Hanne, Denmark
I've done Kungsleden (2018) and Padjelantaleden (2023), and in between two trips to more southern parts of the same mountain range (around Grövelsjön). This summer I will finally go to Sarek for a 10 day solo hike. Watching your beautiful video makes me just tingle with anticipation. Thanks for sharing it!
I've been fairly housebound due to health problems over the past few months (I'm 23) so I just want to say thanks for documenting and sharing your journey, it was a pleasure to watch.
Great video👍 Greetings from Sweden🇸🇪
Second time I’ve watched this, a great record of a great trip; hope to complete a similar route myself in the next year or two, have walked the northern part of the Kungsluden and all the Padjelanta Trail, but longing for the wilderness of Sarek. Hope you still adventuring 👍
"Ive become fully immersed in the rhythm of my journey" - beautifully said
Nice to follow your journey! Sarek’s tough and rewarding. I live in Norway not too far from this area, and visited Sarek twice in wintertime in the late 80s. In many ways easier to visit during the winter (walk on rivers instead of crossing them…) although of course winter has its own challenges. Thanks for the video!
Lovely job sir! Did very well in means of production too!!
This was splendid mate. Never knew about the "Alaska of europe" before today. Cheers
Great video! I trekked through Sarek with 2 friends in 2015. It was such a beautiful landscape and great experience. I remember thinking: „I have to come back here every year“ yet didn‘t make it back since then. Your route is pretty interesting, we approached Sarek through Rappadalen/Skirfe and made our way through to Alggavagge/Padjelanta and then back to Kvikkjokk. We encountered a lot of traces of wildlife (elk, bear and wolves) and had the strongest / most surreal northern lights at night. I‘ll come back - maybe this time taking your route.
Kiitos! (thank You) greetings from Finland
Beautiful hike, very nicely captured and narrated. I hope to do something similar next summer (though through rather less wild landscapes).
In addition to being my handsome doppelgänger, what a lovely trip! I've now added it to my list of places to go to. Thank you for hauling all that gear to show us what it's like. Cheers from the USA.
Excellent video, spectacular views. Thanks for sharing!
thanks for making that ! nice no bears !
Really nice trip and pretty tough hike. It's so beautiful in the Sarek wilderness. You made a fantastic video of this amazing hike.
I was there in 2022 and to this day I cannot shake the imressions I had about myself, nature, and the beauty of it all. Will be back next year, hopefully-
Great video! Sarek is amazing! 😊
I thoroughly enjoyed watching it. Thank you for taking us along your journey.
Thank you very much for this splendid video, Gwilym. For many decades ago I did a similar long hike to Sarek, and then some years later, to Padjelanta. Both of those hikes took about 10 days each. So following your excellently documented video, I got many dear memories. You got a new subscriber from Finland. Wishing you and yours all the best, and many new adventures 💕
Stunning, thank you for making/posting this. Always say this part of Europe is like Scotland on steroids and great to see other people from the UK exploring it. It's hard to understand the vastness until there and then especially if you consider the run into Abisko National Park and then over the border into Ovra, Reisa and Stabbersdalen on the way upto Nordkapp. Great vlog really enyoyded it! The only thing i would say and not sure if you had one i'd always take a good bivy, as the winds can be savage up there and well to be fair the MSR would soon collapse. As for river crossings and more for your other viewers for larger rivers that are there just about as dangerous as it gets when solo, worth spending time to find the best crossing point (generally upstream), and don't wade into fast flowing water that's above the knee, so much safer with two people if you know the correct technique but yea walking poles or a good log vital to scout ahead. It's also worth scouting the crossing without the Bergan first to know not suddenly going to meet an underwater ledge with a bottomless drop (had it happen to me few times, especially on glacial rivers that carve over time deep channels in flood literally from 2 foot of fast flowing water to not being able to feel the bottom with 2 poles lasted together)! All the best - there is literally an endless amount of terrain up there, you could spend a lifetime and still find new sites to enjoy.
Edit - sorry you probably got what i meant, but a bivy for an emergency shelter so can drop the tent and let the storm pass (there are some lightweight one's these days such as event/pertex, far cry from the goretex bags of 90's albeit not as durable).
Nice film, it's a simple life, hiking in the mountains gives the soul some rest. Did 7 years 1999-2005, good memories. Thank you so much for sharing.
My father did simular journey 2 week crossing Sarek in the winter late 70s with skies and walking, no phones or anything, just telling friends and hes mom where he would go and when expected to be back.
He was however a scout leader, hunter and orienteer when he grew up so he was very good at reading and using maps. He was in very good physical shape however for me personaly i think the hardest part must be knowing that your are on your own, there is no calling for help with phones, just hope friends will call for help if he have been gone to far.
But like he said i asked about that its all about really knowing yourself what you can do before you go on such a journey. You dont find out something like that during a journey, you need to test yourself with small steeps to build up a self-confidence that is based on testing your skills for real.
Amazing!! I’ve never even heard of this place - it’s so beautiful and serene ❤ brilliant video!
Pack had to be heavy. Well done!
Great trip, great pictures. Thanks for taking me with you.
The British Accents always make things feel like a BBC documentary. Great work, mate!
Great approach, Gwilym! Great video, nice storytelling and very humble!
What a wonderful video! I especially appreciated that you describe the ups and downs of each day, and that you show your route so clearly on the map, including information on the distance you hiked each day.
This is epic. Brilliantly shot, not many people realise just how hard it is to document something like this, amazing job! 👏
Wow, beautiful 😍 I hope to do it some day🤩
Top quality video
Great footage! I want to walk the Kungsleden from Kvikkjokk to Abisko this summer, cant wait!
Great video!
It looks absolutely wonderful. Thank you for taking me visually on this hike. I could almost smell your coffee❤
Great adventure 👍
Nice movie about your journey out there. I really enjoyed it. Stunning landscape and camps. Well done.
Thank you for sharing. ✌️
Absolutely fantastic movie! Very good narrative. Soothing and mesmerizing. 10/10
It's weird how you hate it and then you love it. That area is the only place I'd like to revisit. Usually it's been there done that but that place keeps coming back to me. Hi from Finland.
Gwilym - I thoroughly enjoyed this. Thank you so much for uploading. You seem like quite a thoughtful individual, and I'm sure that this trip gave you plenty of time for introspection. The scenery really is something else. I love getting into nature but I'm not sure if I could stomach 10 days alone in the wilderness with no phone signal so, hats off to you
Excellent video! Really enjoyed your adventure! Can you tell me what type and brand of hiking boots you wore? How they held up...Thanks for posting
I must say: What a interesting and beautiful video, very well done. I am truly impressed! A professional made video very exciting
Watched a little bit of this video, every lunch time while at work. Just finished watching such an amazing adventure. Gwilym thankyou so much for sharing! Liked and Subscribers
Very good video! Best I have seen about Sarek! Well done! So inspiring!
Really enjoyed watching your adventure, Gwil. Fantastic scenery, brought to life with quality videography and editing.
Pro-level camera work and story-telling. Well done!
APPLAUSE - that was a venture, on the fly video footage with an EXCELLENT post edit and narrative worthy of a much larger channel. Do you know what your start out backpack weight was as it looked really heavy? I would definitely like to see a load out video of the kit you used, what was useful, what was not, what you might change etc. You were lucky not to have been plagued by Mossies and Midges. Subbed based on this video.
this is the end you get no bells no whistles... i enjoyed that phrase, amazing video hope you enjoyed this experience!
Really enjoyed your video. Thank you very much.
Thank you for bringing us along on your journey. I enjoyed your combination of filming your paths and showing it on the map.
Great film. I watched the whole thing in one go!
Really enjoyed watching your travels through the National Park. Really well filmed and edited and congrats on a great video. Thanks for sharing!
Awesome video ! I hope i'll be able to do something like this someday ! Just a few questions, did you have an in-reach just in case ? and how heavy was your backpack ? Looks like you're a machine ! Good job !
I had no InReach - this was a conscious decision to magnify the wilderness experience. Of course I took other precautions for safety - left my plan with my wife and always had a contingency escape route in mind. Pack was about 25 to 30kg at the start.
You deserve more subscriber brother. Great video!
Hopefully you'll create more like this in the future.
Wonderful docu. I just crossed Sarek twice. Ritsem to Aktse and back again. Awesome adventure!
I really liked this video! As a swede it's easy to forget just how wild my own country can be. I must compliment you on your pronunciation of the Sapmi names on the map. I lived up north (not this high up) for a year and I can't do much better with these tongue-twisters😄
Thanks you - I'm glad for that feedback. I did as much reserach as possible around how to pronounce the place names. Hopefully I didn't butcher them too much. I also chatted with a Swedish couple towards the end of my walk and they said that as Swedes they still struggle with the Sapmi names!
Thank you for sharing the beauty of Sapmi, my home!
Lovely video Gwylim. Thanks for sharing it - Andrew.
What an achievement and what an amazing film. To have created such quality is a true triumph. A RUclips classic. Thank you so much. So inspiring!
Thankyou for shareing this. This was reaaly good to watch, stunning scenery.
Amazing Gwil, I feel chilled having watched your artic adventures. 🤩
Great video! I stand in awe though at the amount of kit you are carrying. I started at Ritsem on Padjelanta and then onto the Priests' Trail last August and did so with not much more than 15kg to start with (6kg food). I was happy with that lighter load as I barely had enough strength left in the end to reach Duottar Mountain Station to call an ambulance heli due to a burst appendix (yes, shit happens - especially when you are in the place furthest away from a paved road in Sweden). The flight across Sarek was rather special though 😀 So, I am quite happy having taken on board some of the (ultra) light backpacking tips by Jorgen Johansson e.a.
Thanks for sharing! I did a similar trip in Sarek last year, my video is in swedish however... Can't wait to go back
A brilliant video and to take all that equipment so as to share with the world this journey is a great feet of endurance.
Great video 👍🙂
I watched the entire movie, as a father of two young children, I took a break, thank you.
Thank you and glad you enjoyed it!
Congrats ! What a wonderful tour.
Great film, Gwil. Appreciate all the effort you put into it. Incredible absence of other people along the way!
Much appreciated!
So in which month did you take your trek, and did you see any people in the wilderness, or were there just reindeer?
looks like late augusti/september to a swedish person.
@@Guildforsucks Is that mozzie season I wonder. Seem to be absent here.
Mid to late August. The Mosquitoes were present. but not a problem.
@@gwil_morrison Great. I hear that they are very bad earlier in the season. So what was the total weight of your pack? Looks very heavy.
@@gwil_morrison And did you see any other people mid-trip, or was it just at the beginning and at the end?
Nice video! Good job. I've been relatively near Sarek during some of my fishing trips all over Northern Sweden but never trekked thru on these trails. I should really do that. Northern Sweden is such a great place for those who enjoy to spend time in nature, there's so much pristine and beautiful areas up there. And it helps that Sweden has great laws allowing for harvesting from nature and camping. It's a great place to spend summer:)
Vakkert! Takk för att du visar Sverikes ödemarker :)
This brings back memories:-) Standing in northern Sweden trying to find a way across icy rivers... Oh the hours I've spend searching for the best crossing point. Great great great 16 days alone. Beautiful place. I'm going to Scotland twice this year, so any good ideas for hikes? As much wilderness as possible. Knoydart is an option, but anything else? And, what camera did you use in Sweden?
Awesome! A very well made film! Very inspiring.
beautiful and fascinating! and very well done! I planning my hike to Sarek. What part of August was it? Were mosquitoes big issue?
Thanks for sharing. Really enjoyed the production and your commentary.
Planning my own Sarek experience this season so great input!
One question though. Could you share some insight how you carried your camera bag (the one on your left hip). How did you fasten it and how was your experience carrying the bag like that?
With kind regards
Johan
But Gwilym, although you're out of contact after 8'50" , if you rolled an ankle surely you could set off your PLB ? They're so small these days and you can hire them at gear shops and gov. departments.
You had some good weather that must have been great.
I did that same stretch a few years back we had 8 days rain. It was horrible.
Nice with some mountain views. Been hiking north of sweden basicly all my life(since 6 now pushing 50) but never been to Sarek. Dont think i will end up there since i like to combine hiking with fishing and your not allowed to fish in that area.
This was great!
Thank you so much for sharing!
Hiked in Sarek 10 times and i can say your movie is great
But where are the mosquitos??? You must have met some of them 😂
Good video. Maybe dial down the dramatic narration a bit - it's a hike, not the invasion of Fallujah.
Did you go from sweden to Narvik norway, and then bus back into sweeden? Bring a fishing rod next time 😊
Great effort! What a superb trip, and so nicely presented. Although you did not seem bothered by your pack, I'm wondering, for your next trip, if you couldn't save weight by slimming down on camera gear. A year or so ago I did something very similar, also alone, and got good film results (also on RUclips) with no more than a simple Sony compact camera and a solar panel (without integral, or any other, battery).
Whole-heartedly enjoyed your video! I'm looking forward to seeing more from you in the future.
You seem to be a well-versed hiker. In your videos can you please urge people to clean up after them, and to not try these things without proper training/guide? As of late europeans come to these mountains to hike but most of them are underequipped and do not pick up their trash. These mountains are still home to many animals and the sami with their reindeers. A lot of news have sparked up in the last couple of years that travelers will not bring their trash with them home, and this is just left to stay in the mountains forever, or until local sami villagers pick this up and transport it with helicopter.
There are also many cases of stranded hikers from central europe who have gotten lost. Then they have to call for an emergency helicopter, taking up valueable resources that sami and other locals need in order to survive. Good luck getting a helicopter to transport your food to the village when they are off rescuing people all the time.
Thank you, great video
Thanks for an entertaining movie - subscribed! Brings back memories from my 2022 Sarek hike (there's video on my channel in case you want to see some of the same landscapes like Luottolahko but in even worse weather 😂)
Wonderful film. Thank you 🙏
Gorgeous, thanks for sharing!!!!
Thank you for sharing this epic journey! You keep the story flowing, great shots and it is a pleasure to watch! I know how much it takes extra to get all the shots, so well done for such a long hike! How much charge do you get from that solar panel during the day? I might need to get one myself! Keep it up and be safe 😊
A great adventure, and very well filmed. I enjoyed your video very much. Congrats.
600th subscriber! Good vids I hope you blow up on RUclips!
As a swede I'm very happy for you. Amazingly well done.
Ecstatic the sun finally braved it's way thru to greet you. Fine eye and feel for capturing the true cold north trail,how desolate and lost an older traveler and reindeer must have felt...no one's got your back.To survive,you have to do it all...and you did.Kudos...there is a sadness when leaving the wilderness,part of you let's go what you really are,yet you long to embrace civilization and those you left behind.Honor both
Thanks a lot for the effort for bringing us with you on the trip! Amazing views and a great accomplishment!
Thanks for sharing! Greetings from Ukraine!