Longyearbyen: Visit a Rugged Winter Wonderland in Norway
Longyearbyen—which is located in the remote Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard—is a rugged mining town that has blossomed into a unique tourist destination that allows travelers to experience the stunning beauty of the Arctic. Visitors can view the northern lights, explore an ice cave, or attend a festival celebrating the return of the sun at the conclusion of polar night.
Founded in 1906 by an American entrepreneur named John Munro Longyear, Longyearbyen served as a coal mining town until the 1990s, when the coal mining industry began to decline and company towns started to fall out of favor. Though mining still exists on a small scale, Longyearbyen increasingly attracts adventurous travelers who aren’t afraid to explore a town where polar bears sometimes roam the streets.
Longyearbyen visitors can sign up for numerous excursions, including a dinner cruise under the northern lights. The northern lights can be unpredictable even during the season of polar night, when the sun always stays below the horizon and the sky appears twilight blue, even during standard daylight hours. If you sail out of Isfjorden away from the city lights, there is a good chance that you will encounter nature’s most stunning light show.
Rugged travelers can opt to explore an ice cave. From November through May, visitors can sign up for an excursion that leads hikers up the side of a glacier and allows them to investigate an ice cave located in the glacier’s interior. Travelers who wish to explore a sparkling cavern of ice must be in good health, as exploring an ice cave requires good balance, a fair amount of bending and crouching, and a good degree of comfort with tight spaces.
Every year on March 8th, the residents of Longyearbyen gather on the steps of a long-shuttered hospital to celebrate the end of polar night and the return of the sun. At the moment when the sun shines on the old hospital steps after the months of darkness, there is singing and cheering. The Sun Festival lasts until March 16th and features food, music, and local art.
Longyearbyen is home to several cozy hotels, scrumptious restaurants, lively bars, and museums that showcase the fascinating culture of an Arctic town that is alternately steeped in constant darkness and perpetual sunlight. There is no better place to experience polar night or the midnight sun than a remote Norwegian city that prides itself on its ruggedness and hospitality.
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