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MaartenO
Traveller
0 comments

Posted 8 years ago

Hi everybody,

At this moment I'm considering to make an interrail trip to Norway in april next year. I already have made a quick schedule of where I would like to go.
At this moment I'm planning a 22 day trip:

Day Start End
1 Belgium - Copenhagen
2 Copenhagen - Copenhagen
3 Copenhagen - Copenhagen
4 Copenhagen - Hirthals and Hirthals - Stavangar (boat)
5 Stavangar - Stavangar
6 Stavangar - Stavangar
7 Stavangar - Bergen (Bus)
8 Bergen - Bergen
9 Bergen - Bergen
10 Bergen - Myrdal - Flam
11 Flam - Trondheim
12 Trondheim - Trondheim
13 Trondheim - ???
14 ??? - Bodo
15 Bodo - Lofoten (Boat)
16 Lofoten Lofoten
17 Lofoten Lofoten
18 Lofoten Lofoten
19 Lofoten Narvik (Bus)
20 Narvik ???
21 ???? Malmo
22 Malmo Belgium

At this moment their are still some blanks in this planning. But these are things I have to complete in the future. My plan to go alone and to sleep in Hostels.
I would like to do some hikes in de places where I'm going to stay a couple of days.

So what do you think of this planning or there any tips or places I should add to this list? (altough is already pretty full).
I'm also not going to stay in Oslo and Stockholm, I already been there on a city trip and no need to see it twice.

Greetz

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Flo
Traveller
10723 comments

replied 8 years ago

Hi!

Your route looks good overall - however if you want to travel with the 10in22 Interrail pass I would try to fit it one or two extra stops in order to use more of your ten travel days.
For instance, you could do Bergen - Flam Railway - Oslo within one day and then take the night train to Trondheim straightaway.
On the way from Trondheim to Bodo you could get off the train at Lonsdal to spend some time at Saltfjell.
What would be interesting too are the Rauma railway down to Andalsnes from where you could visit Alesund or Roros railway to visit Roros.

On the way back from Narvik I'd take the direct night train to Stockholm to get closer to home; from Stockholm you could continue either directly to Malmö or make a detour via Göteborg.

Like I said, if you wont change your route much you should have a look into regular tickets too to compare prices - if you buy some tickets in advance you might be cheaper off compared to Interrail. Just ask if you need help.

We are official partners of interrail.eu - to support the free information and the forum on railcc, please be fair and buy your official Interrail pass via our railcc partner link: [ux]https://rail.shop/interrail[/ux]
Thank you! :)


Flo 8)