Excellent job! I’m an American that’s been living in Northern Norway for 20 years. I’ve biked from North Cape to Stavanger and know the joys and pains of cycling Norway. If you haven’t done so already (I’ll check!), you should do a video series on the Helgeland coast from Bodø to Brønnøysund. The “kystriksveien”, or coastal route, is spectacular while avoiding the accents of the inland routes. Look me up in Nesna and I’ll grill you a burger and fill up your tires!
Big thanks to you Sir, for this tribute of yours to my beloved fatherland. I have been traveling along many of these roads countless times, on my way to friends and family, and it touches my heart to see others fall in love with the patch that I call home. Greetings from the holy land 😀 (Nærbø). Magne.
Mathew, you donated us the most spectacular and best filmed and commented (and skilled of course) travel report we ever experienced on RUclips! Thanks a lot ❤️👍 Regards from Cologne Moni & Karl
I've only just stumbled across your channel Matthew. What an absolute joy it is. We just moved to Sweden from England 2 months ago. It's been a real treat getting my teeth into the cycling here in Småland, but the scenery in Norway is on another level. If you ever need some company for a tour, let me know!
I have driven down Måbødalen (new road) many times. The road you cycled down used to be the main (and only) road until 1984. Back then, the road didn't have proper road barriers, as well as the cars having bad brakes and no seatbelts. One of the crazier roads in Norway. Loved the video though! :)
Hi. Måbødalen was the site of a tragic bus accident in 1988. A bus with kids and parents from Sweden lost the brakes going down as the driver was probably unfamiliar with driving at 8% decline. 16 were killed and 18 wounded.
Oh my god, this is the road through my great grandfather's farming land and home outside Eidfjord. I have always wanted to visit and this video of the ride through Voringfossen and along the Eidfjord and Hardangerfjord secured it. Thank you. I can't wait to ride that road.
Life and health situations result in my (and many others) not being able to even consider biking through lands like this ... we just wouldnt make it, and we know that. Watching this series still allows us to kind of experience, a trip that we wish we could do ourselves ... and thats the value of a video series like this, we all get to at least dip into the wonderousness of what it could be like, from a distance. To live vicariously through you ... isnt such a bad thing to do.
Fabulous video! I visited Norway twice as a child, in 1970 and 1972, and I'm sure that abandoned road was one we drove on. Do you know what year it was bypassed? I visited Norway twice more, as an adult, on walking tours. I was a keen cyclist when younger, but never fulfilled my dream of cycling in Norway. Now, at 64, I have health issues, which mean I can no longer cycle, which makes me very sad . But watching your videos is a sheer delight. Thank you so much for what you do to promote cycling. I went on a cycle campaign ride in Bristol in about 1980. It doesn't feel as though much has really changed since then with regard to support for people who want to find better ways of travelling rather than driving a car. Nowadays I walk, bus, and train. I hope to visit Norway again, but by train! Once again, thank you. This is the first video of yours that I've stumbled across, so now I look forward to some more of them! Tak!
I think mid 80s the tunnels opened. Thanks for your kind words. I agree very little has changed in the UK everyone is so reliant on cars and the system ensures that. Real shame.
@@matthewnorway mid-80es sound right, I went to Norway with my parents in 81 or 82 I think, and I think we stopped to see that foss. (Of course it could have been a different one, but something felt "familiar".) I must add that, as a Dane, I felt touched to the heart when you went to the "holy land" with the words "a slice of Denmark in Norway". And laughed out loud on the follow-up "it's a glitch in the matrix." Wonderful video, I grew up near a fjord (Flensburg fjord, just north of Flensburg), which is of course a vrry different landscape. Although I don't know where the expression comes from, I certainly know how it _feels_ to be "pining for the fjords".
Matthew, why you don't have more subscribers I don't know. These are without doubt some of, if not the best cycling videos out there. It is hard to imagine that you do these on your own. The films are outstanding. The scripts informative and inspiring, the music fitting. Thank you once again. When I meet cyclist I always tell them to watch your videos.
Thanks Martin, appreciate it! Unfortunately, RUclips prioritise quantity over quality. If you pump out 2 videos a week YT rewards you. Once every few weeks is not how you succeed unless you make viral videos. But slowly I'm building a strong base of subscribers.
I’ve cycled Rallarvegen from Finse to Flåm. Spectacular. But I’ve also been driving these roads for almost 40 years. So to all cyclists: You are all very welcome to Norway - but do as most MC riders and PLEASE use hi-vis vis clothes. And maybe even a flashing light at day-time. Many roads are narrow, curved and hilly, still with a LOT of traffic. The weather can be awful, and if sunny, the sun is low in the morning and evening, even at summer. So stay safe and enjoy our country!
I've been completely blown away by this series. Awesome doesn't even begin to cover it. Is it the most beautiful ride on the planet? From what you've filmed and shown us it could very well be. I really appreciate all the hard work you've put in to bring this series of rides to me in the comfort of my living room. It's a ride I have to do one day before I lose the strength. Thank you so much. You should be hugely proud of the ride and videos. It will be something amazing to look back on at some point. Take care and ride safe. Jay
i just got back from a motorcycle trip through Norway, what a country! I did some of the same roads as you did, also went through Odda, stayed at Stavanger etc. I have never been to a country where the nature is so diverse. 1 moment i was kneedeep in snow in June, the next i was standing in a beautiful lush forest. I rode past the Hardanger Plate, did Lysebotn and part of the Atlantic road and on my way back to the ferry in Kristiansand, when i thought i've seen almost all of it, Norway surprised me once more with the beautiful Telemarken area.
There are quite as lot of roads like this in Norway. They are the original routes before the modern tunnels were built. In 1981 we cycled from Bergen to Oslo and climbed three passes up to 1,000 metres above sea level. On one of them we could have been on the moon, it was so empty and remote and had probably not seen a vehicle for years. We had to use them, the tunnels are closed to cyclists, The snaking climbs at times were totally knee-cracking, but the views and the silence and peace! I wouldn't have missed it for anything. It took us a week and we returned on the train and it took seven hours! The train journey is something special, too. Norway is a wonderful country in so many ways.
You are very justified in taking pride in this series of videos you have created. The ride itself was magnificent and the record astonishing to see. The landscapes of Norway are truly incredible and are so wonderfully exciting to see. I will have to sit down again and watch these as there is just so much to take in. I have watched so many travel videos and believe this to be perhaps the best. Thanks for creating this record and showing this amazing country so brilliantly.
I live in the Pacific Northwest of the USA and it is stunningly beautiful, but it pales in comparison to Fjord Norway. Thank you for making to effort to film this for use.
What a way to finish!! A truly epic journey. Just watched it twice to make sure I was not watching a dream. I can't begin to imagine what it was like in real life. Thank you for filming & sharing.... bl00dy awesome.
15:48 did you know you are standing a few feet away from an old viking grave? next time you are in flat-Jæren, keep an eye out for small "humps" in the fields where the farmers are not allowed to grow
very interesting!!!...Beneath some unsuspecting Norwegian farmland, a 1,000-year-old Viking site consisting of several burial mounds, the remnants of a ship, a large feasting hall and a cult house have been discovered by archaeologists in Ostfold County, Norway.... A Norwegian couple got quite the shock when renovating their old family house near Bodø in northern Norway this month...Experts from Tromsø museum visited the house the following day.... By Norwegian law, any cultural monuments that show traces of human activity prior to 1537 are automatically preserved.
RUclips suggested your channel to me after watching some bike touring videos. Just binged this entire series and will be exploring the rest of your videos. Have to say, these are some of the best cycling videos I’ve ever watched. As a novice bike tourer and 58 years old, I’m now looking at Norway as a possible future tour but blimey I’m going to have to train harder for those hills 😂
Great to hear! Norway has everything when it comes to bike touring. The coastal routes are a lot flatter and just as beautiful in places. Find out more at www.cyclenorway.com
Oh Great! Another of Matthew's vids. Excellent advice at the end too. I live up in the hills of the North Pennines, amongst 5 of the 6 highest cols in England, (plus two higher still in Scotland) and although I often climb only up to 627m therefore, those days when the prevailing SW wind is in my face on the outward journey, and at my back on the return, are the good days. When the wind shifts round to the E or N, those days are killers. I hope to do your Fjord route summer of 2023, and will ride it S to N.
I don´t know how or why your channel popped up in my YT feed, but I´m glad it did. An excellent presentation of cycling in the Fjords, very well filmed and presented. I´m based in Oslo myself and have done a lot of cycling in the UK (also my home country) in the past as well as cycling across Europe, but never really done that much here. Although I used to work at one of the bike shops when I first moved here some 15 years ago. This has got me suitably inspired to get the bike back out of the attic and on the road again :) thanks for creating these videos :)
Great storytelling and great cinematography. It is an amazing documentary and I hope RUclips will make sure that more people would see it. Amazing journey.
I did the Rallarvegen from Haugastøl to Flåm and it was the most amazing bike ride that I did. It was in the middle of Jully and it was like 30 places that it was impossible to ride because of the snow. Thaks for sharing this beatifull images.
I drove from Stavanger to Odda with my father in September, 2016. It was amazing how stunning the fjords are. The 'secret' roads you highlight here have me planning another trip - by bike this time. Takk skal du ha!
What a great journey! I loved every part of it, well done Matthew! I did part of the NC500 in Scotland this year, which was phenomenal, but beatiful Norway will be my next goal!
I appreciate your comment alot. I always see the riding as the easy part. The filming is the hard part especially when you're tired or the weather is against you.
Thank you for showing this amazing trip in my home country. I myself have been living in a couple of these areas (Hardanger and Ryfylke) and I loved the scenery. And I have travelled by car many times along these roads from west to east. Great to watch it and to hear it from you who are visting from abroad 🤩 Thank you for sharing! 😀
"Happiness = enthusiasm - pain" (Philosopher Arne Naess). The truth of this quote is so much shining through when sharing with us your emotions when cycling in Norway. Thank you!
"i'm a goner here" and "the holy flat land" haha, very good ,D ,D that trip must have been testing, and those are some beautifuly filmed awesome landscapes too - well done!
Hi Mathew! Been inspired by some of your videos and me and a friend are heading on our first bikepacking trip to Hardangarfjord in a couple of weeks! Was wondering if you could give us some direction as to how to get onto the abandoned road from Eidfjord to Vorringfossen? Would love to do it!
Thank you again Matthew! You certainly are living an epic journey in Norway. Your poetic description along with such breathtaking video is food for the soul. My wife Jan and I can't wait to cycle part of Norway in July. Thank you once again for the beautiful inspiration. All the best, Steve and Jan
Amazing video - thank you for making and sharing it. Absolutely stunning. Norway is high on my list of places to go, and eventually sail - but I hadn't considered cycling. It's now on the list. (& as I'm getting old...maybe I'll have enough Kroners to have a chase (cheat) car... however, I'm always looking for any excuse to sleep in my bivy.) I've run low on water cycling in Japan. There are vending machines. There are always vending machines in Japan. (The ones on the far side of Sakajima were surrounded by a bunch of young cyclists on terrific racing bikes, full lycra - ALL vaping. ??? ) And everything in those vending machines was cranked with sugar. Should be okay- right? After a few bouts of glycemic shock, my legs just started cramping. And nothing like empty carbs to make you 'hit the wall' two hours before the end. One thing I don't want to do in Norway is rent a car and stare at tarmac with occasional glimpses of Norway.
Extraordinary cycling adventure of Norway's fjord route, wow. Beautiful landscapes along the way. Your stamina is amazing. You are the only one I see on youtube who did this. Thank you for sharing.
This is really good, professional quality. I think it could have been on a regular tv channel. It must be a lot of work that go into this, I guess you do this for a living or what? As a Norwegian I like it when foreigners visit us and share with us how they experience our country. You know you get so used to living here and videos like this in a way re open my eyes on Norwegian nature and all the possibilities that I myself haven't explored yet. 5000 subscribers on this channel it way to little with so high quality, should find a way to spread this content to more people! Btw, it's usually safe to drink from big mountain lakes directly, theres very little that pollutes them.
Simply superb. You're quite the film maker and accomplished cyclist. Thought provoking narration and beautiful photography, also very funny. Loved every minute. Thank you
Hi Matthew, well presented and excellent content of fabulous journeys! I've subscribed and will start digging through your archives.🙂 I've travelled and explored extensively in Canada and the US for 8 years and also keep off the beaten tracks wherever possible. Stay safe. 🇬🇧
So beautiful and so inspiring. Excellent videos. Thank you Matthew, I have been cycling around Norway since beginning of the 90-ties and seen almost all the beautiful places you have captured, but the films you makes inspires me to go back and see them again and I will. Again, thanks, you are very good:-)
Thanks Johnny, I have cycled Hardanger Fjord three times now but could quite easily go back many times more. You never get bored of outstanding beauty which is different depending on the weather and time of year.
I've watched this so many times ...you video blows my mind ...I live in paradise ...Bottom of the world New Zealand ....but this amazing video is next level for where dreams are made .....yes not all year round but WOW ...thank you for all your hard work in sharing with us Roger NZ
Thanks for a lot of very beautiful videos. We love Norge, and have been there maybe 40 times and we want to go back. Not on bike but in our Fiat Ducato camper van.Im sorry ;-) . But we are around 70, so we need a bit of luxury, so we can walk the country every day, on our tour. Hope to see som more of your inspiring, funny and very well shot films.
awesome video and great content Matthew. You really have given me loads to consider for my trip next year. May even just extend it a little more now. Thanks for all your hard work in pulling these vids together and sharing.
My wife and I just came back from vacation in Norway where we were mainly hiking/tenting in the mountains but also saw some of the popular sights afterwards. That ment a lot of driving. Around 2000 km in Norway. Honestly we did feel a bit frustrated having to go around by car because you can't really take in all the beauty through a glass window in "high" speed. However driving on some of the roads you showed in the video was with very mixed emotions for us as we come from Denmark (super flat country with straight forward wide roads). The nature is so gorgeous in Norway but driving on these super narrow (1-1,5 car wide) roads where traffic is going in both directions, while going up and down mountain sides with constant turns where you can't see incoming cars... some of them coming in high speed... it's super stressful and exhausting (at least to us). From a car you focus a lot more on the road than the view. I use my bike everyday and come from a country where getting around on bike is a huge part of the culture and infrastructure. Would I have preferred to get around in Norway on a bike instead of car like you did? NO! Like with the people we met on the trails in the mountains that were running back to back marathons for multiple days, when I saw people on a bike on these roads I thought to myself "people doing this have got to be the most sadistic out there. Who can find joy through this physical pain?". I've never tried cycling in Norway and I don't think I ever will. It looks too tough to be enjoyable to me but big respect to the ones doing it! All in all your videos are really great and it's super interesting to see Norway from another perspective.
I’ve wanted to do Måbødalen for quite some time, but the landslides have put me off. It doesn’t look as bad as I imagined, so maybe I’ll give it a go at some stage 😊
It took a bit of time getting over the land slide but apart from that it's fine. However, you never know what has happen this winter and how the road is now. Let me know if you cycle it!
Amazing.. Thank you very much Matthew! I am in the area of the Hardangerfjord every year and most certainly I am going to explore the hidden road by MTB you are mentioning!
Well done. One suggestion - the footage speaks for itself. When it comes to commentary - less if more. Watch Gianni Filippini's (the Brompton Traveler) videos for a model. If you want to create a guidebook with all of the details put them into a pdf and sell it.
"would I recommend this route? It depends... " ...some will feel that is a challenge.. I would maybe go from south to north - winds usually from SW - the sun not right in the face (mostly) and "easy" first - then harder... Astonishing series of vids - and the comments are at another level.
12:30 You missed the stone commemorating the post man whom was taken by an avalanche, and used his post horn to dig him self out. He digged for three days before he broke free.
@@matthewnorwayPostman G. Turveit was taken by an avalanche january 3 1903 and was buried for 53 hours. The stretch of road was impossible to keep open during the winter, so the post was sent by walking over the mountain on skies. The postal route was so dangerous that he had a coffin premade stored in his barn just in case... And btw, it was not his only avalanche, he was taken two times by avalanches.... The stone is on the north side of the pass, between the intersection from the main road and the lake.
Another awesome video…stunning and inspiring!….having watched all of your videos multiple times has set the wheels in motion for a two week tour in Norway.Was wondering if you would choose Bergen to Bodo via Eurovelo#1 or Oslo to Bergen roundtrip seeking out the fjords,Rallarvegan,Alesund and coast road.Would love your suggestion…
Too difficult to say but Bergen to Bodø is a lot more flatter and easier. It's really beautiful but many ferries to wait for. If you're after adventure then Oslo to Bergen has it all but you might be repeating some of the journey on the way back.
This is what RUclips is made for. Amazing footage, story telling and video editing. Thanks Matthew, for sharing with us.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Amen.
Excellent job! I’m an American that’s been living in Northern Norway for 20 years. I’ve biked from North Cape to Stavanger and know the joys and pains of cycling Norway. If you haven’t done so already (I’ll check!), you should do a video series on the Helgeland coast from Bodø to Brønnøysund. The “kystriksveien”, or coastal route, is spectacular while avoiding the accents of the inland routes. Look me up in Nesna and I’ll grill you a burger and fill up your tires!
North Cape to Stavanger is cheating as it's only downhill. The difficult route is Stavanger to North Cape which is only uphill.
@@drSvensen Ha! That’s what I always say when I relate the story. “Uh.. It wasn’t hard ‘cause it was all downhill.”
😂
This would have to be the most spectacular and well narrated bike documentary I have ever seen, wow wow wow. Thank-you
Big thanks to you Sir, for this tribute of yours to my beloved fatherland. I have been traveling along many of these roads countless times, on my way to friends and family, and it touches my heart to see others fall in love with the patch that I call home. Greetings from the holy land 😀 (Nærbø). Magne.
It's one of the most beautiful places on the planet - that is a fact not a statement!
Mathew, you donated us the most spectacular and best filmed and commented (and skilled of course) travel report we ever experienced on RUclips! Thanks a lot ❤️👍 Regards from Cologne
Moni & Karl
I've only just stumbled across your channel Matthew. What an absolute joy it is.
We just moved to Sweden from England 2 months ago. It's been a real treat getting my teeth into the cycling here in Småland, but the scenery in Norway is on another level.
If you ever need some company for a tour, let me know!
Great to hear Kevin, Norway looks forward to welcoming you 👍
I have driven down Måbødalen (new road) many times. The road you cycled down used to be the main (and only) road until 1984. Back then, the road didn't have proper road barriers, as well as the cars having bad brakes and no seatbelts. One of the crazier roads in Norway. Loved the video though! :)
Hi. Måbødalen was the site of a tragic bus accident in 1988. A bus with kids and parents from Sweden lost the brakes going down as the driver was probably unfamiliar with driving at 8% decline. 16 were killed and 18 wounded.
Oh my god, this is the road through my great grandfather's farming land and home outside Eidfjord. I have always wanted to visit and this video of the ride through Voringfossen and along the Eidfjord and Hardangerfjord secured it. Thank you. I can't wait to ride that road.
Another one; old serpentine down to Frafjord. The village got their new tunnel some 20+ years ago.
Life and health situations result in my (and many others) not being able to even consider biking through lands like this ... we just wouldnt make it, and we know that. Watching this series still allows us to kind of experience, a trip that we wish we could do ourselves ... and thats the value of a video series like this, we all get to at least dip into the wonderousness of what it could be like, from a distance.
To live vicariously through you ... isnt such a bad thing to do.
I rarely leave a comment anywhere but this was an inspirational film! Great camera work and commentary. Just really good.
Fabulous video! I visited Norway twice as a child, in 1970 and 1972, and I'm sure that abandoned road was one we drove on. Do you know what year it was bypassed? I visited Norway twice more, as an adult, on walking tours. I was a keen cyclist when younger, but never fulfilled my dream of cycling in Norway. Now, at 64, I have health issues, which mean I can no longer cycle, which makes me very sad . But watching your videos is a sheer delight. Thank you so much for what you do to promote cycling. I went on a cycle campaign ride in Bristol in about 1980. It doesn't feel as though much has really changed since then with regard to support for people who want to find better ways of travelling rather than driving a car. Nowadays I walk, bus, and train. I hope to visit Norway again, but by train! Once again, thank you. This is the first video of yours that I've stumbled across, so now I look forward to some more of them! Tak!
I think mid 80s the tunnels opened. Thanks for your kind words. I agree very little has changed in the UK everyone is so reliant on cars and the system ensures that. Real shame.
@@matthewnorway mid-80es sound right, I went to Norway with my parents in 81 or 82 I think, and I think we stopped to see that foss. (Of course it could have been a different one, but something felt "familiar".)
I must add that, as a Dane, I felt touched to the heart when you went to the "holy land" with the words "a slice of Denmark in Norway". And laughed out loud on the follow-up "it's a glitch in the matrix."
Wonderful video, I grew up near a fjord (Flensburg fjord, just north of Flensburg), which is of course a vrry different landscape. Although I don't know where the expression comes from, I certainly know how it _feels_ to be "pining for the fjords".
Matthew, why you don't have more subscribers I don't know. These are without doubt some of, if not the best cycling videos out there. It is hard to imagine that you do these on your own. The films are outstanding. The scripts informative and inspiring, the music fitting. Thank you once again. When I meet cyclist I always tell them to watch your videos.
Thanks Martin, appreciate it! Unfortunately, RUclips prioritise quantity over quality. If you pump out 2 videos a week YT rewards you. Once every few weeks is not how you succeed unless you make viral videos. But slowly I'm building a strong base of subscribers.
@@matthewnorway These videos are really well done. So much work you put into them.
@@matthewnorway amayzing , love every minutt
Spectacular! When I make it to Norway, I will never want to leave.
You have done it again - inspiring - I will skip lunch, and get out training for this summers trip to fjord Norway!
Awesome Mark!
I’ve cycled Rallarvegen from Finse to Flåm. Spectacular. But I’ve also been driving these roads for almost 40 years. So to all cyclists: You are all very welcome to Norway - but do as most MC riders and PLEASE use hi-vis vis clothes. And maybe even a flashing light at day-time. Many roads are narrow, curved and hilly, still with a LOT of traffic. The weather can be awful, and if sunny, the sun is low in the morning and evening, even at summer. So stay safe and enjoy our country!
Amazing job, the whole series is a masterpiece and extremely enjoyable to watch, thanks!
I've been completely blown away by this series. Awesome doesn't even begin to cover it. Is it the most beautiful ride on the planet? From what you've filmed and shown us it could very well be. I really appreciate all the hard work you've put in to bring this series of rides to me in the comfort of my living room. It's a ride I have to do one day before I lose the strength. Thank you so much. You should be hugely proud of the ride and videos. It will be something amazing to look back on at some point. Take care and ride safe. Jay
i just got back from a motorcycle trip through Norway, what a country! I did some of the same roads as you did, also went through Odda, stayed at Stavanger etc. I have never been to a country where the nature is so diverse. 1 moment i was kneedeep in snow in June, the next i was standing in a beautiful lush forest. I rode past the Hardanger Plate, did Lysebotn and part of the Atlantic road and on my way back to the ferry in Kristiansand, when i thought i've seen almost all of it, Norway surprised me once more with the beautiful Telemarken area.
That’s EXACTLY how I felt! And Telemark is the icing on a cake that you weren’t expecting!
Just discovered your site today and have to say a huge thank you for taking the time and making the effort ! Greetings from S.W. Ontario, Canada.
There are quite as lot of roads like this in Norway. They are the original routes before the modern tunnels were built. In 1981 we cycled from Bergen to Oslo and climbed three passes up to 1,000 metres above sea level. On one of them we could have been on the moon, it was so empty and remote and had probably not seen a vehicle for years. We had to use them, the tunnels are closed to cyclists, The snaking climbs at times were totally knee-cracking, but the views and the silence and peace! I wouldn't have missed it for anything. It took us a week and we returned on the train and it took seven hours! The train journey is something special, too. Norway is a wonderful country in so many ways.
Thanks for sharing your adventures - I couldn't agree more 😊
You are very justified in taking pride in this series of videos you have created. The ride itself was magnificent and the record astonishing to see. The landscapes of Norway are truly incredible and are so wonderfully exciting to see. I will have to sit down again and watch these as there is just so much to take in. I have watched so many travel videos and believe this to be perhaps the best. Thanks for creating this record and showing this amazing country so brilliantly.
Appreciate it Ivor!
Just writing a comment to help with the engagement for the algoritm. So more people can have a change to watch this amazing journey.
Appreciate it!
I live in the Pacific Northwest of the USA and it is stunningly beautiful, but it pales in comparison to Fjord Norway. Thank you for making to effort to film this for use.
What a way to finish!! A truly epic journey.
Just watched it twice to make sure I was not watching a dream. I can't begin to imagine what it was like in real life.
Thank you for filming & sharing.... bl00dy awesome.
Glad you enjoyed it Christopher!
15:48 did you know you are standing a few feet away from an old viking grave? next time you are in flat-Jæren, keep an eye out for small "humps" in the fields where the farmers are not allowed to grow
very interesting!!!...Beneath some unsuspecting Norwegian farmland, a 1,000-year-old Viking site consisting of several burial mounds, the remnants of a ship, a large feasting hall and a cult house have been discovered by archaeologists in Ostfold County, Norway....
A Norwegian couple got quite the shock when renovating their old family house near Bodø in northern Norway this month...Experts from Tromsø museum visited the house the following day....
By Norwegian law, any cultural monuments that show traces of human activity prior to 1537 are automatically preserved.
RUclips suggested your channel to me after watching some bike touring videos. Just binged this entire series and will be exploring the rest of your videos.
Have to say, these are some of the best cycling videos I’ve ever watched. As a novice bike tourer and 58 years old, I’m now looking at Norway as a possible future tour but blimey I’m going to have to train harder for those hills 😂
Great to hear! Norway has everything when it comes to bike touring. The coastal routes are a lot flatter and just as beautiful in places. Find out more at www.cyclenorway.com
will definitely be spending some time on your website :) @@matthewnorway
Oh Great! Another of Matthew's vids. Excellent advice at the end too. I live up in the hills of the North Pennines, amongst 5 of the 6 highest cols in England, (plus two higher still in Scotland) and although I often climb only up to 627m therefore, those days when the prevailing SW wind is in my face on the outward journey, and at my back on the return, are the good days. When the wind shifts round to the E or N, those days are killers. I hope to do your Fjord route summer of 2023, and will ride it S to N.
Yes, S to N is perhaps better for wind 👍.
Beautiful places in Norway just beautiful....landscape, waterfall, scenary, water,........love your videos 👌👌👌😍😍😍😍😍😍
I don´t know how or why your channel popped up in my YT feed, but I´m glad it did. An excellent presentation of cycling in the Fjords, very well filmed and presented. I´m based in Oslo myself and have done a lot of cycling in the UK (also my home country) in the past as well as cycling across Europe, but never really done that much here. Although I used to work at one of the bike shops when I first moved here some 15 years ago. This has got me suitably inspired to get the bike back out of the attic and on the road again :) thanks for creating these videos :)
Epic-awesome story telling. This video does Norway’s beauty justice!
Great storytelling and great cinematography. It is an amazing documentary and I hope RUclips will make sure that more people would see it. Amazing journey.
I did the Rallarvegen from Haugastøl to Flåm and it was the most amazing bike ride that I did. It was in the middle of Jully and it was like 30 places that it was impossible to ride because of the snow. Thaks for sharing this beatifull images.
seams like a great route for those whom like climbing and epic scenery. amazing
Matthew - goodonya - let the sufferfest begin. You have to earn that experience. Great sport and artwork.
Thanks Alan!
I drove from Stavanger to Odda with my father in September, 2016. It was amazing how stunning the fjords are. The 'secret' roads you highlight here have me planning another trip - by bike this time. Takk skal du ha!
Great to hear Nathan!
"So its like nearly 20 degrees!" You gotta be from Norway for that to be a hot day.
Remember this was up in the mountains and sweating on the bike... 😁
What a great journey! I loved every part of it, well done Matthew! I did part of the NC500 in Scotland this year, which was phenomenal, but beatiful Norway will be my next goal!
what an incredible video, enjoyed every part of that, whats more mind bloggling is you managed do all the riding and filming at the same time
I appreciate your comment alot. I always see the riding as the easy part. The filming is the hard part especially when you're tired or the weather is against you.
Thank you for showing this amazing trip in my home country. I myself have been living in a couple of these areas (Hardanger and Ryfylke) and I loved the scenery. And I have travelled by car many times along these roads from west to east. Great to watch it and to hear it from you who are visting from abroad 🤩 Thank you for sharing! 😀
Glad you enjoyed it!
"Happiness = enthusiasm - pain" (Philosopher Arne Naess). The truth of this quote is so much shining through when sharing with us your emotions when cycling in Norway. Thank you!
What an achievement. Thanks for sharing these heavenly views.
Awesome job man, thanks for sharing!
"i'm a goner here" and "the holy flat land" haha, very good ,D ,D that trip must have been testing, and those are some beautifuly filmed awesome landscapes too - well done!
7:12 I see Norwegian prices as well. 8$ for some jam. 😅
You can drink the water from the lakes no problem, dont need a stream ;)
Yes expensive but it's homemade jam from a local fam. It's $3-4 from a supermarket.
Hi Mathew! Been inspired by some of your videos and me and a friend are heading on our first bikepacking trip to Hardangarfjord in a couple of weeks! Was wondering if you could give us some direction as to how to get onto the abandoned road from Eidfjord to Vorringfossen? Would love to do it!
Thank you again Matthew! You certainly are living an epic journey in Norway. Your poetic description along with such breathtaking video is food for the soul. My wife Jan and I can't wait to cycle part of Norway in July. Thank you once again for the beautiful inspiration. All the best, Steve and Jan
Steve, so happy you're heading to Norway this July! Safe travels and thanks for the kind feedback!
The Fjord Norway series has been really great. This final one is fhe ‘icing on the cake’. Well done and many thanks (brought back a ton of memories)
Good to hear Phill, thanks!
Fantastic film footage and a great ride
Many thanks!
Amazing video - thank you for making and sharing it. Absolutely stunning. Norway is high on my list of places to go, and eventually sail - but I hadn't considered cycling. It's now on the list. (& as I'm getting old...maybe I'll have enough Kroners to have a chase (cheat) car... however, I'm always looking for any excuse to sleep in my bivy.)
I've run low on water cycling in Japan. There are vending machines. There are always vending machines in Japan. (The ones on the far side of Sakajima were surrounded by a bunch of young cyclists on terrific racing bikes, full lycra - ALL vaping. ??? ) And everything in those vending machines was cranked with sugar. Should be okay- right? After a few bouts of glycemic shock, my legs just started cramping. And nothing like empty carbs to make you 'hit the wall' two hours before the end.
One thing I don't want to do in Norway is rent a car and stare at tarmac with occasional glimpses of Norway.
super stuff indeed..thanks from Ireland !
amazing man! the landscape is just beyond words! hope someday I can cycle there!
I hope so too! 👊
Extraordinary cycling adventure of Norway's fjord route, wow. Beautiful landscapes along the way. Your stamina is amazing. You are the only one I see on youtube who did this. Thank you for sharing.
Amazing effort and an amazing series. Simply brilliant.
Appreciate it Einar :)
Incredible footage, great story. Thank you !
What a ride, absolutely awesome!!
Thanks Gary 👍
What a splendid series Matthew. Thanks so much for sharing it.
Glad you enjoyed it!
This is really good, professional quality. I think it could have been on a regular tv channel. It must be a lot of work that go into this, I guess you do this for a living or what? As a Norwegian I like it when foreigners visit us and share with us how they experience our country. You know you get so used to living here and videos like this in a way re open my eyes on Norwegian nature and all the possibilities that I myself haven't explored yet.
5000 subscribers on this channel it way to little with so high quality, should find a way to spread this content to more people!
Btw, it's usually safe to drink from big mountain lakes directly, theres very little that pollutes them.
Thanks Billy 🙂
Just stunning mate!! Really enjoy the views and your narrative. Can't wait to make this journey myself.
🙏 You Should!
Simply superb. You're quite the film maker and accomplished cyclist. Thought provoking narration and beautiful photography, also very funny. Loved every minute. Thank you
Great to hear Richard, thanks 🙏
It would have been perfectly safe to take and drink water from those reservoirs. Thanks for uploading this
How long did this journey take you? It looks incredible, thanks to you Norway is now my #1 bucket list riding destination
Amazing scenery, really enjoyed watching!
Astonishing and inspirational. Thank you!!!
Awesome...just awesome
Looked absolutely stunning and amazing on video which is only 1/4 of the beauty and feel of what it looks like when you see it in person.
Hi Matthew, well presented and excellent content of fabulous journeys! I've subscribed and will start digging through your archives.🙂 I've travelled and explored extensively in Canada and the US for 8 years and also keep off the beaten tracks wherever possible. Stay safe. 🇬🇧
Thanks, will do!
Excellent! Narrative, music and, of course, breathtaking views. Well worth watching over and over again. Congratulations Matthew!
Awesome! Thank you Jaque!
So beautiful and so inspiring. Excellent videos. Thank you Matthew, I have been cycling around Norway since beginning of the 90-ties and seen almost all the beautiful places you have captured, but the films you makes inspires me to go back and see them again and I will. Again, thanks, you are very good:-)
Thanks Johnny, I have cycled Hardanger Fjord three times now but could quite easily go back many times more. You never get bored of outstanding beauty which is different depending on the weather and time of year.
Awesome. Love this country.
I've watched this so many times ...you video blows my mind ...I live in paradise ...Bottom of the world New Zealand ....but this amazing video is next level for where dreams are made .....yes not all year round but WOW ...thank you for all your hard work in sharing with us Roger NZ
Thanks for a lot of very beautiful videos. We love Norge, and have been there maybe 40 times and we want to go back. Not on bike but in our Fiat Ducato camper van.Im sorry ;-) . But we are around 70, so we need a bit of luxury, so we can walk the country every day, on our tour. Hope to see som more of your inspiring, funny and very well shot films.
awesome video and great content Matthew. You really have given me loads to consider for my trip next year. May even just extend it a little more now. Thanks for all your hard work in pulling these vids together and sharing.
Glad I can be of some help Andy!
WOW, spectacular documentary. Thanks for sharing. Watched it with joy and amazement. Greetings from Holland.
That was beautiful, thanks for that.
Thanks a lot Matthew! Yet another mesmerizing and truly inspiring masterpiece 🤪
Thanks Ole 🙂
A sense of awe watching this.
Thank you for the time to make it. See you in Norway on a bike some day..
You will!
Thank you for sharing your journey! So well done. Kudos to you, Matthew!
Thanks Bill!
Fantastic, just fantastic!!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Amazing as always matthew, breathtaking 👍
Wow!
I'm speechless this is incredible!
Fantastic effort and commentary. A cut above the others on You Tube.
Many Thanks! 👍
Remarkable work, Matthew! The drone and other camera work were excellent, as was the music accompaniment. How did you create the animated maps?
Relive.cc
My wife and I just came back from vacation in Norway where we were mainly hiking/tenting in the mountains but also saw some of the popular sights afterwards. That ment a lot of driving. Around 2000 km in Norway. Honestly we did feel a bit frustrated having to go around by car because you can't really take in all the beauty through a glass window in "high" speed. However driving on some of the roads you showed in the video was with very mixed emotions for us as we come from Denmark (super flat country with straight forward wide roads). The nature is so gorgeous in Norway but driving on these super narrow (1-1,5 car wide) roads where traffic is going in both directions, while going up and down mountain sides with constant turns where you can't see incoming cars... some of them coming in high speed... it's super stressful and exhausting (at least to us). From a car you focus a lot more on the road than the view.
I use my bike everyday and come from a country where getting around on bike is a huge part of the culture and infrastructure. Would I have preferred to get around in Norway on a bike instead of car like you did? NO! Like with the people we met on the trails in the mountains that were running back to back marathons for multiple days, when I saw people on a bike on these roads I thought to myself "people doing this have got to be the most sadistic out there. Who can find joy through this physical pain?". I've never tried cycling in Norway and I don't think I ever will. It looks too tough to be enjoyable to me but big respect to the ones doing it!
All in all your videos are really great and it's super interesting to see Norway from another perspective.
I’ve wanted to do Måbødalen for quite some time, but the landslides have put me off. It doesn’t look as bad as I imagined, so maybe I’ll give it a go at some stage 😊
It took a bit of time getting over the land slide but apart from that it's fine. However, you never know what has happen this winter and how the road is now. Let me know if you cycle it!
Amazing.. Thank you very much Matthew! I am in the area of the Hardangerfjord every year and most certainly I am going to explore the hidden road by MTB you are mentioning!
Unfortunately it's closed and they're not planning on fixing it. I've been advised not to ride it again due to more rockslides :(.
Well done. One suggestion - the footage speaks for itself. When it comes to commentary - less if more. Watch Gianni Filippini's (the Brompton Traveler) videos for a model. If you want to create a guidebook with all of the details put them into a pdf and sell it.
Another stunning spectacle of nature's beauty. Thanks for sharing this with us.
Glad you enjoyed it
Magical! Well done Sir!
Thanks Richard!
"Obviously you don't drink from lakes" - Of course you can drink from those lakes, it doesn't get purer than that! 😂
00:33 Where is that exactly?. My mind is blown.
Absolutely beautiful 🇳🇴❤️😍
"would I recommend this route? It depends... " ...some will feel that is a challenge.. I would maybe go from south to north - winds usually from SW - the sun not right in the face (mostly) and "easy" first - then harder... Astonishing series of vids - and the comments are at another level.
Good advice! Thanks!
12:30
You missed the stone commemorating the post man whom was taken by an avalanche, and used his post horn to dig him self out. He digged for three days before he broke free.
I never knew that! Thanks for letting me know. Great story! I'll look out for it next time I ride there!
@@matthewnorwayPostman G. Turveit was taken by an avalanche january 3 1903 and was buried for 53 hours.
The stretch of road was impossible to keep open during the winter, so the post was sent by walking over the mountain on skies. The postal route was so dangerous that he had a coffin premade stored in his barn just in case...
And btw, it was not his only avalanche, he was taken two times by avalanches....
The stone is on the north side of the pass, between the intersection from the main road and the lake.
A different generation! What a story and what a legend! I hope the people who got their mail appreciated the service they were getting!
Another awesome video…stunning and inspiring!….having watched all of your videos multiple times has set the wheels in motion for a two week tour in Norway.Was wondering if you would choose Bergen to Bodo via Eurovelo#1 or Oslo to Bergen roundtrip seeking out the fjords,Rallarvegan,Alesund and coast road.Would love your suggestion…
Too difficult to say but Bergen to Bodø is a lot more flatter and easier. It's really beautiful but many ferries to wait for. If you're after adventure then Oslo to Bergen has it all but you might be repeating some of the journey on the way back.
@@matthewnorway Great thank-you for the insight.Looks like many amazing places to see in the South so may save the Arctic for a return visit.
Thank you, Thank you
Incredible! 🔝💚🙌🏻
Making me jealous. Beautiful
Wow, awesome ride.....
Amazing story..