Thursday, April 24, 2014

Northern Lights ~ Part two

Part two of Y.'s aurora hunting! We finally get to the part where the estimate cost of the hunting trip, hehe! Knowing how people cannot live without updating their FB and instagram, wifi's availability is also touched on :D

How long was the wait for the aurora? Did you have to stay up the whole night in the cold? Or was there a guide? The village, where the hotel is located, is really small and the street lights were turned off at 11pm, so there was practically no light pollution. There was no need to go anywhere to see the lights. The second time I saw it, it was just above the hotel, so that was a plus. The hotel has an aurora alarm functionally up till 1am ( which was actually a Samsung phone, hehe). It would beep when the lights were spotted in the area. It was not necessary to sit outside in below zero weather looking up to the night sky. 

Touched up to enhance the aurora. 

Touched up to enhance the aurora.

Was there wifi? Wifi is available in the hotel's reception area and dinning room. If you want to be connected all the time, prepaid data cards are available and cheap in Finland (which is "Nokialand" too). But you can't buy them at the hotel and the nearest town is 42km away... so yes, fairly remote. So get them at the airport prior to the transfer.  




What advice would you dispense to those who have the intention to go? Clothing, training up, camera etc.? Photography-wise, I'm afraid you would need a SLR / DSLR camera and a good tripod. A too-light aluminium tripod risks crashing (seen it happened) and breaking due to the extreme cold (also happened). Plastic bag to put your camera when transferring it from the cold to the warm room (to avoid condensation). Extra battery for your camera as battery life shortened in the cold; I stored mine in my pocket under my thermal suit. The aurora that you can see with your naked eyes is very DIFFERENT from what the camera can capture, so if you go there with the mistaken assumption that you'd see dancing neon green lights, you will be sorely disappointed.





How was the flight like? There are direct flights from Singapore to Helsinki, and from Helsinki, you would need to transfer to a domestic flight to Ivalo, which is another 1.5 hour flight.

Can you share the ballpark of the entire trip? At Nellim, the ready packages range from 1250 to 1450 euros. The package includes airport transfers, all food, accommodation, activities and winter wear (suit, socks, boots, balaclava, mittens and helmet for snowmobiling). Aside from the flight, I need not spend another cent. Finland does not have a tipping culture, same as Singapore. There were different guides for each activity. Everyone in the hotel were really nice and friendly! Most speak good English and and are very accommodating. You just need toiletries, some warm clothing, thermal underwear, chargers, meds, if any. Give and take, be ready to spend about SGD4.5k per pax, depending on the exchange rate. 



What do you like most? It is hard to pick. The husky ride was fantastic, snowmobiling at night was fabulous (unfortunately need driving license so I can only be the passenger), feeding reindeers, tasting snowflakes. Wow. Besides the activities and lights, I liked the guests from the different places too - USA, UK, Netherlands, South Africa, Australia, Italy, France. Though I went alone, I was never lonely. 





Drilling over the frozen Inari Lake to fish - netting. 

Would you go back? I'm tempted to make a side trip there when I visit another part of Europe the next time. I'd do it all again. 




So that is the end of the hunt for the northern lights... Seeing the photos make everything that I saw on TV and read in National Geographic much closer, simply because they were taken by a friend. It was like... so it is real, not some camera tricks!









No comments:

Post a Comment

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...