How to reach Treriksröset?
up vote
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Treriksröset is a point which borders Norway, Sweden and Finland. Now the question is, how to get there? Take a look at this map:

The closest route is the E8, but it takes 5 hours to go by foot or bike! That's too much for me. It's not even reachable by car. So I was wondering, isn't there an easier way to get there?
borders sweden norway finland
add a comment |
up vote
17
down vote
favorite
Treriksröset is a point which borders Norway, Sweden and Finland. Now the question is, how to get there? Take a look at this map:

The closest route is the E8, but it takes 5 hours to go by foot or bike! That's too much for me. It's not even reachable by car. So I was wondering, isn't there an easier way to get there?
borders sweden norway finland
4
VTC: The first few hundreds results on Google explains how to go there, even Wikipedia does it. Travel.SE is not a substitute or a copy for a search engine, it's meant to solve problems. There is no problem here.
– motoDrizzt
Aug 16 '17 at 8:52
2
@motoDrizzt And by now, the first of those results is Travel Stack Exchange ☺. Although I agree it's not a well-researched question, poor research does not make it off-topic (downvotes are the usual way to express this). Most of the results are IMHO less complete than my answer, and some provide out-of-date or incorrect information; at least my answer is editable should this occur.
– gerrit
Aug 16 '17 at 9:23
add a comment |
up vote
17
down vote
favorite
up vote
17
down vote
favorite
Treriksröset is a point which borders Norway, Sweden and Finland. Now the question is, how to get there? Take a look at this map:

The closest route is the E8, but it takes 5 hours to go by foot or bike! That's too much for me. It's not even reachable by car. So I was wondering, isn't there an easier way to get there?
borders sweden norway finland
Treriksröset is a point which borders Norway, Sweden and Finland. Now the question is, how to get there? Take a look at this map:

The closest route is the E8, but it takes 5 hours to go by foot or bike! That's too much for me. It's not even reachable by car. So I was wondering, isn't there an easier way to get there?
borders sweden norway finland
borders sweden norway finland
asked Aug 15 '17 at 11:41
AutoDemolisher
918820
918820
4
VTC: The first few hundreds results on Google explains how to go there, even Wikipedia does it. Travel.SE is not a substitute or a copy for a search engine, it's meant to solve problems. There is no problem here.
– motoDrizzt
Aug 16 '17 at 8:52
2
@motoDrizzt And by now, the first of those results is Travel Stack Exchange ☺. Although I agree it's not a well-researched question, poor research does not make it off-topic (downvotes are the usual way to express this). Most of the results are IMHO less complete than my answer, and some provide out-of-date or incorrect information; at least my answer is editable should this occur.
– gerrit
Aug 16 '17 at 9:23
add a comment |
4
VTC: The first few hundreds results on Google explains how to go there, even Wikipedia does it. Travel.SE is not a substitute or a copy for a search engine, it's meant to solve problems. There is no problem here.
– motoDrizzt
Aug 16 '17 at 8:52
2
@motoDrizzt And by now, the first of those results is Travel Stack Exchange ☺. Although I agree it's not a well-researched question, poor research does not make it off-topic (downvotes are the usual way to express this). Most of the results are IMHO less complete than my answer, and some provide out-of-date or incorrect information; at least my answer is editable should this occur.
– gerrit
Aug 16 '17 at 9:23
4
4
VTC: The first few hundreds results on Google explains how to go there, even Wikipedia does it. Travel.SE is not a substitute or a copy for a search engine, it's meant to solve problems. There is no problem here.
– motoDrizzt
Aug 16 '17 at 8:52
VTC: The first few hundreds results on Google explains how to go there, even Wikipedia does it. Travel.SE is not a substitute or a copy for a search engine, it's meant to solve problems. There is no problem here.
– motoDrizzt
Aug 16 '17 at 8:52
2
2
@motoDrizzt And by now, the first of those results is Travel Stack Exchange ☺. Although I agree it's not a well-researched question, poor research does not make it off-topic (downvotes are the usual way to express this). Most of the results are IMHO less complete than my answer, and some provide out-of-date or incorrect information; at least my answer is editable should this occur.
– gerrit
Aug 16 '17 at 9:23
@motoDrizzt And by now, the first of those results is Travel Stack Exchange ☺. Although I agree it's not a well-researched question, poor research does not make it off-topic (downvotes are the usual way to express this). Most of the results are IMHO less complete than my answer, and some provide out-of-date or incorrect information; at least my answer is editable should this occur.
– gerrit
Aug 16 '17 at 9:23
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
up vote
27
down vote
accepted
Treriksröset is not reachable by road. You can get there on foot or ski (perhaps kayak too but there may be some rapids to navigate upstream). Mountain-bike may work (I'm not sure). From your screenshot it appears Google Maps knows the trail on the Norwegian side, but not the shorter and much more popular hiking trail on the Finnish side. Openstreetmap has all trails (including some not on any other maps; be careful assuming anything about those). You can explore the Finnish topographic map online via retkikartta.fi, paper maps are for sale in Kilpisjärvi. If you want to hike on the Norwegian side via Goldahytta, try norgeskart. For maps on the Swedish side, try Swedish fjällkartan (mountain map). I believe the Swedish fjällkartan will be for sale in Kilpisjärvi but I'm less sure about the Norwegian maps.
Gerald Schneider pointed out you can get there by dogsled. That works, but only in winter. In summer and autumn (June to September) you can get to within 3 km by boat. The last 3 km from Golddaluokta are still on foot. The trail is shown on Swedish fjällkartan and on Openstreetmap.
Your options in the snow-free season:
- Boat from Kilpisjärvi to Goldaluokta/Koltaluokta (Sweden) + 3 km hike each way. June to September. See mallalaiva for details on the boat. I believe the hiking trail is easy but it is a hiking trail through a rather wild area, not a stroll in the park, so you do need some outdoor preparation. It can be cold, wet, and windy any time of year (wet is unlikely in winter) and you can't immediately run for shelter (although there does appear to be a wilderness cabin on the Finnish side near Treriksröset, it's not staffed and I don't know if it's normally locked or open).

Hiking trail Goldaluokta–Treriksröset. Source: Skogsfrun, Wikimedia Commons, CC-BY-SA 3.0.
- Hike from Kilpisjärvi (Finland). 11 km each way. This is part of the long distance Nordkalottruta/Kalottireiti hiking trail. I've done this and found it easy, but I'm an experienced hiker. It was busy in September; we met 10× more people on those 11 km than in the 150 km prior.
- Hike from Gálggojávri (Norway) via Goldahytta. 13 km to Goldahytta (where you can sleep), then another 3 km to Treriksröset. That appears to be the trail shown on your Google Map screenshot (including some roadwalking on E8). Some WW II artefacts along the way. Description (in Norwegian) with photos at kugo.no. This is certainly the toughest alternative and not recommended if you're not experienced with wilderness hiking and navigation. I certainly would not attempt a round trip in a day. Walking times as reported by Google Maps, Openstreetmap, or others are completely useless for wilderness/mountain trails/routes as you may have to ford rivers, scramble through boulder fields, and navigate through the fog.
You may be able to do it on a mountainbike; I don't remember how easy the trails from Goldahytta or Kilpisjärvi are and I haven't done the others. There are other routes but they will be much longer (certainly more than a day).
When there is snow, you can go on skis, by dog-sled, or by snowmobile. You can even rent a fat bike and try to get there by bicycle.
If you plan an outdoorsy way of getting there you may want to consult The Great Outdoors Stack Exchange.
Incidentally, I would recommend to avoid going there between mid-June and mid-August as the mosquitoes in that area are quite vicious. Autumn (late August to mid September) is the best time of the year (and rather popular in Finland).
Given that the boat from Kilpisjärvi waits for only two hours, I'd say the trail has to be pretty much a stroll in the park if it's really nearly 3km one way.
– JollyJoker
Aug 16 '17 at 8:11
@JollyJoker True. If going out with an early boat one can also take a later boat back if desired. With my comment I was rather thinking of weather turning bad and the absence of any form of shelter (I believe the unstaffed Finnish wilderness cabin near Treriksröset is normally locked, but added a note about this).
– gerrit
Aug 16 '17 at 8:49
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
There are organizers who offer tours to Treriksröset via dogsled. A dogsled tour is an incredible experience in itself I can only recommend.
This doesn't really provide an answer to the question.
– cybermonkey
Aug 16 '17 at 8:51
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
27
down vote
accepted
Treriksröset is not reachable by road. You can get there on foot or ski (perhaps kayak too but there may be some rapids to navigate upstream). Mountain-bike may work (I'm not sure). From your screenshot it appears Google Maps knows the trail on the Norwegian side, but not the shorter and much more popular hiking trail on the Finnish side. Openstreetmap has all trails (including some not on any other maps; be careful assuming anything about those). You can explore the Finnish topographic map online via retkikartta.fi, paper maps are for sale in Kilpisjärvi. If you want to hike on the Norwegian side via Goldahytta, try norgeskart. For maps on the Swedish side, try Swedish fjällkartan (mountain map). I believe the Swedish fjällkartan will be for sale in Kilpisjärvi but I'm less sure about the Norwegian maps.
Gerald Schneider pointed out you can get there by dogsled. That works, but only in winter. In summer and autumn (June to September) you can get to within 3 km by boat. The last 3 km from Golddaluokta are still on foot. The trail is shown on Swedish fjällkartan and on Openstreetmap.
Your options in the snow-free season:
- Boat from Kilpisjärvi to Goldaluokta/Koltaluokta (Sweden) + 3 km hike each way. June to September. See mallalaiva for details on the boat. I believe the hiking trail is easy but it is a hiking trail through a rather wild area, not a stroll in the park, so you do need some outdoor preparation. It can be cold, wet, and windy any time of year (wet is unlikely in winter) and you can't immediately run for shelter (although there does appear to be a wilderness cabin on the Finnish side near Treriksröset, it's not staffed and I don't know if it's normally locked or open).

Hiking trail Goldaluokta–Treriksröset. Source: Skogsfrun, Wikimedia Commons, CC-BY-SA 3.0.
- Hike from Kilpisjärvi (Finland). 11 km each way. This is part of the long distance Nordkalottruta/Kalottireiti hiking trail. I've done this and found it easy, but I'm an experienced hiker. It was busy in September; we met 10× more people on those 11 km than in the 150 km prior.
- Hike from Gálggojávri (Norway) via Goldahytta. 13 km to Goldahytta (where you can sleep), then another 3 km to Treriksröset. That appears to be the trail shown on your Google Map screenshot (including some roadwalking on E8). Some WW II artefacts along the way. Description (in Norwegian) with photos at kugo.no. This is certainly the toughest alternative and not recommended if you're not experienced with wilderness hiking and navigation. I certainly would not attempt a round trip in a day. Walking times as reported by Google Maps, Openstreetmap, or others are completely useless for wilderness/mountain trails/routes as you may have to ford rivers, scramble through boulder fields, and navigate through the fog.
You may be able to do it on a mountainbike; I don't remember how easy the trails from Goldahytta or Kilpisjärvi are and I haven't done the others. There are other routes but they will be much longer (certainly more than a day).
When there is snow, you can go on skis, by dog-sled, or by snowmobile. You can even rent a fat bike and try to get there by bicycle.
If you plan an outdoorsy way of getting there you may want to consult The Great Outdoors Stack Exchange.
Incidentally, I would recommend to avoid going there between mid-June and mid-August as the mosquitoes in that area are quite vicious. Autumn (late August to mid September) is the best time of the year (and rather popular in Finland).
Given that the boat from Kilpisjärvi waits for only two hours, I'd say the trail has to be pretty much a stroll in the park if it's really nearly 3km one way.
– JollyJoker
Aug 16 '17 at 8:11
@JollyJoker True. If going out with an early boat one can also take a later boat back if desired. With my comment I was rather thinking of weather turning bad and the absence of any form of shelter (I believe the unstaffed Finnish wilderness cabin near Treriksröset is normally locked, but added a note about this).
– gerrit
Aug 16 '17 at 8:49
add a comment |
up vote
27
down vote
accepted
Treriksröset is not reachable by road. You can get there on foot or ski (perhaps kayak too but there may be some rapids to navigate upstream). Mountain-bike may work (I'm not sure). From your screenshot it appears Google Maps knows the trail on the Norwegian side, but not the shorter and much more popular hiking trail on the Finnish side. Openstreetmap has all trails (including some not on any other maps; be careful assuming anything about those). You can explore the Finnish topographic map online via retkikartta.fi, paper maps are for sale in Kilpisjärvi. If you want to hike on the Norwegian side via Goldahytta, try norgeskart. For maps on the Swedish side, try Swedish fjällkartan (mountain map). I believe the Swedish fjällkartan will be for sale in Kilpisjärvi but I'm less sure about the Norwegian maps.
Gerald Schneider pointed out you can get there by dogsled. That works, but only in winter. In summer and autumn (June to September) you can get to within 3 km by boat. The last 3 km from Golddaluokta are still on foot. The trail is shown on Swedish fjällkartan and on Openstreetmap.
Your options in the snow-free season:
- Boat from Kilpisjärvi to Goldaluokta/Koltaluokta (Sweden) + 3 km hike each way. June to September. See mallalaiva for details on the boat. I believe the hiking trail is easy but it is a hiking trail through a rather wild area, not a stroll in the park, so you do need some outdoor preparation. It can be cold, wet, and windy any time of year (wet is unlikely in winter) and you can't immediately run for shelter (although there does appear to be a wilderness cabin on the Finnish side near Treriksröset, it's not staffed and I don't know if it's normally locked or open).

Hiking trail Goldaluokta–Treriksröset. Source: Skogsfrun, Wikimedia Commons, CC-BY-SA 3.0.
- Hike from Kilpisjärvi (Finland). 11 km each way. This is part of the long distance Nordkalottruta/Kalottireiti hiking trail. I've done this and found it easy, but I'm an experienced hiker. It was busy in September; we met 10× more people on those 11 km than in the 150 km prior.
- Hike from Gálggojávri (Norway) via Goldahytta. 13 km to Goldahytta (where you can sleep), then another 3 km to Treriksröset. That appears to be the trail shown on your Google Map screenshot (including some roadwalking on E8). Some WW II artefacts along the way. Description (in Norwegian) with photos at kugo.no. This is certainly the toughest alternative and not recommended if you're not experienced with wilderness hiking and navigation. I certainly would not attempt a round trip in a day. Walking times as reported by Google Maps, Openstreetmap, or others are completely useless for wilderness/mountain trails/routes as you may have to ford rivers, scramble through boulder fields, and navigate through the fog.
You may be able to do it on a mountainbike; I don't remember how easy the trails from Goldahytta or Kilpisjärvi are and I haven't done the others. There are other routes but they will be much longer (certainly more than a day).
When there is snow, you can go on skis, by dog-sled, or by snowmobile. You can even rent a fat bike and try to get there by bicycle.
If you plan an outdoorsy way of getting there you may want to consult The Great Outdoors Stack Exchange.
Incidentally, I would recommend to avoid going there between mid-June and mid-August as the mosquitoes in that area are quite vicious. Autumn (late August to mid September) is the best time of the year (and rather popular in Finland).
Given that the boat from Kilpisjärvi waits for only two hours, I'd say the trail has to be pretty much a stroll in the park if it's really nearly 3km one way.
– JollyJoker
Aug 16 '17 at 8:11
@JollyJoker True. If going out with an early boat one can also take a later boat back if desired. With my comment I was rather thinking of weather turning bad and the absence of any form of shelter (I believe the unstaffed Finnish wilderness cabin near Treriksröset is normally locked, but added a note about this).
– gerrit
Aug 16 '17 at 8:49
add a comment |
up vote
27
down vote
accepted
up vote
27
down vote
accepted
Treriksröset is not reachable by road. You can get there on foot or ski (perhaps kayak too but there may be some rapids to navigate upstream). Mountain-bike may work (I'm not sure). From your screenshot it appears Google Maps knows the trail on the Norwegian side, but not the shorter and much more popular hiking trail on the Finnish side. Openstreetmap has all trails (including some not on any other maps; be careful assuming anything about those). You can explore the Finnish topographic map online via retkikartta.fi, paper maps are for sale in Kilpisjärvi. If you want to hike on the Norwegian side via Goldahytta, try norgeskart. For maps on the Swedish side, try Swedish fjällkartan (mountain map). I believe the Swedish fjällkartan will be for sale in Kilpisjärvi but I'm less sure about the Norwegian maps.
Gerald Schneider pointed out you can get there by dogsled. That works, but only in winter. In summer and autumn (June to September) you can get to within 3 km by boat. The last 3 km from Golddaluokta are still on foot. The trail is shown on Swedish fjällkartan and on Openstreetmap.
Your options in the snow-free season:
- Boat from Kilpisjärvi to Goldaluokta/Koltaluokta (Sweden) + 3 km hike each way. June to September. See mallalaiva for details on the boat. I believe the hiking trail is easy but it is a hiking trail through a rather wild area, not a stroll in the park, so you do need some outdoor preparation. It can be cold, wet, and windy any time of year (wet is unlikely in winter) and you can't immediately run for shelter (although there does appear to be a wilderness cabin on the Finnish side near Treriksröset, it's not staffed and I don't know if it's normally locked or open).

Hiking trail Goldaluokta–Treriksröset. Source: Skogsfrun, Wikimedia Commons, CC-BY-SA 3.0.
- Hike from Kilpisjärvi (Finland). 11 km each way. This is part of the long distance Nordkalottruta/Kalottireiti hiking trail. I've done this and found it easy, but I'm an experienced hiker. It was busy in September; we met 10× more people on those 11 km than in the 150 km prior.
- Hike from Gálggojávri (Norway) via Goldahytta. 13 km to Goldahytta (where you can sleep), then another 3 km to Treriksröset. That appears to be the trail shown on your Google Map screenshot (including some roadwalking on E8). Some WW II artefacts along the way. Description (in Norwegian) with photos at kugo.no. This is certainly the toughest alternative and not recommended if you're not experienced with wilderness hiking and navigation. I certainly would not attempt a round trip in a day. Walking times as reported by Google Maps, Openstreetmap, or others are completely useless for wilderness/mountain trails/routes as you may have to ford rivers, scramble through boulder fields, and navigate through the fog.
You may be able to do it on a mountainbike; I don't remember how easy the trails from Goldahytta or Kilpisjärvi are and I haven't done the others. There are other routes but they will be much longer (certainly more than a day).
When there is snow, you can go on skis, by dog-sled, or by snowmobile. You can even rent a fat bike and try to get there by bicycle.
If you plan an outdoorsy way of getting there you may want to consult The Great Outdoors Stack Exchange.
Incidentally, I would recommend to avoid going there between mid-June and mid-August as the mosquitoes in that area are quite vicious. Autumn (late August to mid September) is the best time of the year (and rather popular in Finland).
Treriksröset is not reachable by road. You can get there on foot or ski (perhaps kayak too but there may be some rapids to navigate upstream). Mountain-bike may work (I'm not sure). From your screenshot it appears Google Maps knows the trail on the Norwegian side, but not the shorter and much more popular hiking trail on the Finnish side. Openstreetmap has all trails (including some not on any other maps; be careful assuming anything about those). You can explore the Finnish topographic map online via retkikartta.fi, paper maps are for sale in Kilpisjärvi. If you want to hike on the Norwegian side via Goldahytta, try norgeskart. For maps on the Swedish side, try Swedish fjällkartan (mountain map). I believe the Swedish fjällkartan will be for sale in Kilpisjärvi but I'm less sure about the Norwegian maps.
Gerald Schneider pointed out you can get there by dogsled. That works, but only in winter. In summer and autumn (June to September) you can get to within 3 km by boat. The last 3 km from Golddaluokta are still on foot. The trail is shown on Swedish fjällkartan and on Openstreetmap.
Your options in the snow-free season:
- Boat from Kilpisjärvi to Goldaluokta/Koltaluokta (Sweden) + 3 km hike each way. June to September. See mallalaiva for details on the boat. I believe the hiking trail is easy but it is a hiking trail through a rather wild area, not a stroll in the park, so you do need some outdoor preparation. It can be cold, wet, and windy any time of year (wet is unlikely in winter) and you can't immediately run for shelter (although there does appear to be a wilderness cabin on the Finnish side near Treriksröset, it's not staffed and I don't know if it's normally locked or open).

Hiking trail Goldaluokta–Treriksröset. Source: Skogsfrun, Wikimedia Commons, CC-BY-SA 3.0.
- Hike from Kilpisjärvi (Finland). 11 km each way. This is part of the long distance Nordkalottruta/Kalottireiti hiking trail. I've done this and found it easy, but I'm an experienced hiker. It was busy in September; we met 10× more people on those 11 km than in the 150 km prior.
- Hike from Gálggojávri (Norway) via Goldahytta. 13 km to Goldahytta (where you can sleep), then another 3 km to Treriksröset. That appears to be the trail shown on your Google Map screenshot (including some roadwalking on E8). Some WW II artefacts along the way. Description (in Norwegian) with photos at kugo.no. This is certainly the toughest alternative and not recommended if you're not experienced with wilderness hiking and navigation. I certainly would not attempt a round trip in a day. Walking times as reported by Google Maps, Openstreetmap, or others are completely useless for wilderness/mountain trails/routes as you may have to ford rivers, scramble through boulder fields, and navigate through the fog.
You may be able to do it on a mountainbike; I don't remember how easy the trails from Goldahytta or Kilpisjärvi are and I haven't done the others. There are other routes but they will be much longer (certainly more than a day).
When there is snow, you can go on skis, by dog-sled, or by snowmobile. You can even rent a fat bike and try to get there by bicycle.
If you plan an outdoorsy way of getting there you may want to consult The Great Outdoors Stack Exchange.
Incidentally, I would recommend to avoid going there between mid-June and mid-August as the mosquitoes in that area are quite vicious. Autumn (late August to mid September) is the best time of the year (and rather popular in Finland).
edited Aug 16 '17 at 8:47
answered Aug 15 '17 at 15:33
gerrit
26.1k984207
26.1k984207
Given that the boat from Kilpisjärvi waits for only two hours, I'd say the trail has to be pretty much a stroll in the park if it's really nearly 3km one way.
– JollyJoker
Aug 16 '17 at 8:11
@JollyJoker True. If going out with an early boat one can also take a later boat back if desired. With my comment I was rather thinking of weather turning bad and the absence of any form of shelter (I believe the unstaffed Finnish wilderness cabin near Treriksröset is normally locked, but added a note about this).
– gerrit
Aug 16 '17 at 8:49
add a comment |
Given that the boat from Kilpisjärvi waits for only two hours, I'd say the trail has to be pretty much a stroll in the park if it's really nearly 3km one way.
– JollyJoker
Aug 16 '17 at 8:11
@JollyJoker True. If going out with an early boat one can also take a later boat back if desired. With my comment I was rather thinking of weather turning bad and the absence of any form of shelter (I believe the unstaffed Finnish wilderness cabin near Treriksröset is normally locked, but added a note about this).
– gerrit
Aug 16 '17 at 8:49
Given that the boat from Kilpisjärvi waits for only two hours, I'd say the trail has to be pretty much a stroll in the park if it's really nearly 3km one way.
– JollyJoker
Aug 16 '17 at 8:11
Given that the boat from Kilpisjärvi waits for only two hours, I'd say the trail has to be pretty much a stroll in the park if it's really nearly 3km one way.
– JollyJoker
Aug 16 '17 at 8:11
@JollyJoker True. If going out with an early boat one can also take a later boat back if desired. With my comment I was rather thinking of weather turning bad and the absence of any form of shelter (I believe the unstaffed Finnish wilderness cabin near Treriksröset is normally locked, but added a note about this).
– gerrit
Aug 16 '17 at 8:49
@JollyJoker True. If going out with an early boat one can also take a later boat back if desired. With my comment I was rather thinking of weather turning bad and the absence of any form of shelter (I believe the unstaffed Finnish wilderness cabin near Treriksröset is normally locked, but added a note about this).
– gerrit
Aug 16 '17 at 8:49
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
There are organizers who offer tours to Treriksröset via dogsled. A dogsled tour is an incredible experience in itself I can only recommend.
This doesn't really provide an answer to the question.
– cybermonkey
Aug 16 '17 at 8:51
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
There are organizers who offer tours to Treriksröset via dogsled. A dogsled tour is an incredible experience in itself I can only recommend.
This doesn't really provide an answer to the question.
– cybermonkey
Aug 16 '17 at 8:51
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
up vote
5
down vote
There are organizers who offer tours to Treriksröset via dogsled. A dogsled tour is an incredible experience in itself I can only recommend.
There are organizers who offer tours to Treriksröset via dogsled. A dogsled tour is an incredible experience in itself I can only recommend.
answered Aug 15 '17 at 13:30
Gerald Schneider
22429
22429
This doesn't really provide an answer to the question.
– cybermonkey
Aug 16 '17 at 8:51
add a comment |
This doesn't really provide an answer to the question.
– cybermonkey
Aug 16 '17 at 8:51
This doesn't really provide an answer to the question.
– cybermonkey
Aug 16 '17 at 8:51
This doesn't really provide an answer to the question.
– cybermonkey
Aug 16 '17 at 8:51
add a comment |
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4
VTC: The first few hundreds results on Google explains how to go there, even Wikipedia does it. Travel.SE is not a substitute or a copy for a search engine, it's meant to solve problems. There is no problem here.
– motoDrizzt
Aug 16 '17 at 8:52
2
@motoDrizzt And by now, the first of those results is Travel Stack Exchange ☺. Although I agree it's not a well-researched question, poor research does not make it off-topic (downvotes are the usual way to express this). Most of the results are IMHO less complete than my answer, and some provide out-of-date or incorrect information; at least my answer is editable should this occur.
– gerrit
Aug 16 '17 at 9:23