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Saltstraumen maelstrom
Saltstraumen maelstrom





saltstraumen maelstrom

Arrive early enough to visit the visitor centre and check which way things are going. When the tide's going out, they're on the west side. The experience is more immediate from the shoreline, but for the best views, stand on the arching Saltstraumbrua bridge, overlooking the strait, and watch as the waters swirl like nebulae.Īs a general rule, when the tide is coming in from the west, the best views are on the east side of the bridge. Should you be unlucky enough to hit an off day, it may recall little more than the water swirling around your bath plug. In spring, you can also see the squawking colonies of gulls that nest on the midstream island of Storholmen.Īt its best – which is most of the time – it's an exhilarating spectacle.

#Saltstraumen maelstrom series

This maelstrom, claimed to be the world's largest, is actually a kinetic series of smaller whirlpools that form, surge, coalesce, then disperse, and it's an ideal environment for plankton, which in turn attract an abundance of fish and therefore anglers. Being there at the right time involves careful planning. The incredibly strong currents happen in this strait because it connect two large water bodies, namely the outer Saltfjorden to the large Skjerstadfjorden. With wide bodies of water on both sides, the strait is a major bottleneck for the tidal water.

saltstraumen maelstrom

At its narrowest, the strait is just 150 metres wide. Tourist information can actually give you more information about the tidal currents. Saltstraumen is a narrow strait that connects the Saltfjord to the large Skjerstadfjord between the islands of Straumya and Knaplundsya. The result is a churning, 20-knot watery chaos that shifts over 400 million cu metres of water one way, then the other, every six hours. The Maelstrom of Saltstraumen is up to 10 m wide and 5 m deep. At the 3km-long, 150m-wide Saltstraumen Strait, the tides cause one fjord to drain into another, creating the equivalent of a maelstrom at sea.

saltstraumen maelstrom

The Saltstraumen Maelstrom is one of Norway's more unusual natural occurrences, which is guaranteed to occur four times every 24 hours.







Saltstraumen maelstrom