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South from Fauske across the Arctic Circle.
It was cold (-10 Celsius) and and bright, but at least this time there was a place to pull off of E6 and take a photo of us squinting into the brightness with the Arctic Circle Center in the background. The low temperature contributed to a lot of ice on E6 in this area, so we proceeded cautiously and slowly. This really is not a place where you want to slide off the road and get stuck in the snow. The Arctic Circle Center doesn't open til May 1 and a large truck/snowblower was in the process of clearing about 8 feet of snow around the building when we were there. On the way north about a week and a half earlier, it had been warmer, never sinking below 2 degrees celsius, and the main traffic hazard was hydroplaning in deep puddles of water on the road surface between the snowbanks on either side of E6. On the way north, there was no place to pull over anywhere near the Arctic Circle Center to take a photo.
Wreck of the German WWII destroyer Georg Thiele
This is Trygg with the wreck of the German destroyer Georg Thiele, which its crew beached near Narvik after it was seriously damaged by the British navy in the battle of Narvik. It was a challenge to get to this spot. Though it was marked on the map, there was no trail, and it took over an hour of bushwacking each way, scrambling over snow and ice covered rocks and downed trees, climbing up and down slippery slopes, and occasionally plunging our feet through deep snow into small snowmelt-fed creeks. My feet have nearly warmed up now.
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