Mind blown. Jaw dropping scenery. Geez; this has to be one of Europe's most thrilling rides. Reminds me a bit of Going-to-the-Sun Road in Montana. Great stuff!
Great video, Furka and Oberland passes were amazing on hwy 19 when my son and I were travelling from Chur to Zermatt (Aug 2016) but this looks even more exciting. I just subscribed, can't wait to binge watch! Cheers friend.
@@EuropeanRoads which part of Europe is more expensive to visit? Western France, the UK & Ireland? Or Denmark northwards? Up to and including part riding the trains inbetween and driving?
Amazing shot and the song itself take you to the another level. Thanks for posting this :). I am planning for Norway soon to see Auroras because its one of my dream. If you can suggest me any beautiful view, please reply me on this :)
Wait with it. It's the wrong part of the solar cycle. We're at a solar minimum, while it's still *possible* to get northern lights it's better to take that trip during a solar maximum in a few years time. That said, with the low oil prices it's a great time to visit Norway cost wise so consider going here in the summer to watch places like in this video, as those are here every year. Another thing worth noting is that the next solar maximum is expected to land roughly during the summer of 2025 (although it could be anywhere from 2023 to 2026) from what I understand. *If* it ends up being during the summer here then consider going to the south pole for the southern lights instead of to us and the north pole. Hurtigruta operates cruises from Argentina to Antartica in ships with reinforced hulls for arctic conditions that might be worth looking into for that (me and my gf are thinking about that, of course assuming that they even have a trip going down there during that part of the year). If the solar maximum lands during our winter however then Norway might be a great spot, just make sure you go inland a bit to somewhere like kautokeino or Karasjok so your chances of dry and clear night skies are higher and you'll actually *see* the northern lights when they show up. That said, the northern lights are quite spectacular against the fjords, it's just a shame that your chances of seeing them there is lower due to the air moisture and the clouds that causes... Anyway, good luck. =) Oh, and let me know when you start planning your trip in details? Perhaps I can help you out a bit?
Completely normal in places like Hardanger - Geiranger, etc. It's usually fine, Norwegian drivers are cautious and courteous when it comes to this kind of thing.
Maybe it was, but Geiranger gets a lot of cruise liners apparently. There are many buses that go up to the two viewpoints near Geiranger, loaded with tourists from Japan, China, etc.
Nah, that was a cruiseship of sorts, Hurtigruten are white and black, with a red stripe, and a more classic look, they're easy to spot, compared to most generic looking cruiseliners.
That is likely the higher part of Fv. 63 south of Geiranger. This section has an annual winter closure and usually opens in May. I made a video of this section: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-_eelPErH7Gg.html
Yes, I think that's the section. Your video was taken in October. There's still ice remaining. I plan to drive there by end of this June. Hopefully the ice wall is still there. Do you know if there's similar road closer to Trondheim?
I filmed that video in June 2016 but uploaded it in October. I think Trollstigen (also Fv. 63) near Åndalsnes is the closest road near Trondheim that has such a setting.
When I was waching this great video over again tonight, mye OCD got me really hard, because in the video you say it's 12 harpin turns on the road, but i'm only able to count 11 starting with the "ørnesvingen". So where is the 12th? From a mathematic view, it should be an odd number because you get into the first harpin turn from an east-to-west direction and you go out from the last in a west-to-east direction. Even when I checked Google Maps, I was only able to count 11 harpin turns. So where is the 12th?
Hey! Can you please film RV 50 Bron över Motalaviken, Sweden and RV70 Borlänge-Avesta. Go go to buy a camera soon that i give you the videos and you can upload to your channel.
Beautiful scenery but would have been so much nicer in real time and with the ambient noise of the engine rather than imposing your taste in music over the images (I did use the mute button which helped!)
I like the music, and I’m thankful that people who make these videos have exposed me to songs and performers I probably wouldn’t know about otherwise. And yes, there’s always the mute button option.