Things to do in Geirangerfjorden
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Laizas
At the ferry terminal, just beside the tourist office, the young team at this airy, welcoming place put on a handful of tasty hot dishes, good salads and snackier items such as focaccia, wraps and sandwiches. There’s also an internet terminal (Nkr1 per minute).
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Flydalsjuvet
Somewhere you've seen that classic photo, beloved of brochures, of the overhanging rock Flydalsjuvet, usually with a figure gazing down at a cruise ship in Geirangerfjord. The car park, signposted to Flydalsjuvet, about 5km uphill from Geiranger on the Stryn road, offers a great view of the fjord and the green river valley, but doesn't provide exactly the postcard view.
For that, you'll have to drop about 150m down the hill, then descend a slippery and rather indistinct track to the edge. Your intrepid photo subject will have to scramble down gingerly to the overhang about 50m further along…
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Coastal Odyssey
Coastal Odyssey, based at Geiranger Camping (a short walk from the ferry terminal), is run by Jonathan Bendiksen, a Canadian from the Northwest Territories who learnt to kayak almost before he could walk. He rents sea-kayaks (Nkr150/300/600 per hour/half-day/day) and does daily hiking and canoeing trips to four of the finest destinations around the fjord.
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Geiranger Fjordservice
Geiranger Fjordservice does 1½-hour sightseeing boat tours (adult/child Nkr 110/45, sailing 4 times daily Jun-Aug). Its kiosk is within the tourist office. From mid-June to August, it also operates a smaller, 15-seater boat (Nkr390/190) that scuds deeper and faster into the fjord.
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Geiranger Downhill
Geiranger Downhill will drive you up to Djupvasshytta (1038m), from where you can coast for 17 gentle, scenically splendid kilometres by bike (Nkr195) down to the fjord; allow a couple of hours. Book at the sod-roofed cabin 50m above the harbour, which also rents bikes (Nkr50/200 per hour/day).
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Geiranger Fjordsenter
The Geiranger Fjordsenter has tools, artefacts and even whole buildings that have been uprooted and brought here, illustrating the essential themes – the mail packet, avalanches, the building of early roads and the rise of tourism – that have shaped the land and its people.
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