Nordkalotten/Kungsleden/Sarek info
Posted: Fri 30 May, 2014 12:29 pm
Hi everyone
I know this is probably a stretch, but does anyone have any info or experience bushwalking in the Scandinavian Arctic?
I'm heading to Finland for family time in August, and it looks like I'll have a few weeks free afterwards. At the moment I'm eyeing off a route along the Kungsleden/Nordkalotten from Abisko to Akka, and then about 100km of off-track through Sarek National Park to Kvikkjokk.
The main reasons I'm looking at this route are that the northern section of the Kungsleden is quite popular (think Overland Track) and should make a nice, straightforward way to get me familiar with the region, before getting properly stuck in to the off-track stuff through Sarek. There's also easy enough access at each end from Stockholm via overnight trains and a local bus or two.
I've bushwalked in Norway before, but it was much further south in Rondane Nasjonalpark, so I'm not quite sure what to expect up above the Arctic Circle...
Can anyone offer any words of wisdom? Much of what's available on the net is in Swedish/Norwegian/Finnish :/
Cheers, Nick

I know this is probably a stretch, but does anyone have any info or experience bushwalking in the Scandinavian Arctic?
I'm heading to Finland for family time in August, and it looks like I'll have a few weeks free afterwards. At the moment I'm eyeing off a route along the Kungsleden/Nordkalotten from Abisko to Akka, and then about 100km of off-track through Sarek National Park to Kvikkjokk.
The main reasons I'm looking at this route are that the northern section of the Kungsleden is quite popular (think Overland Track) and should make a nice, straightforward way to get me familiar with the region, before getting properly stuck in to the off-track stuff through Sarek. There's also easy enough access at each end from Stockholm via overnight trains and a local bus or two.
I've bushwalked in Norway before, but it was much further south in Rondane Nasjonalpark, so I'm not quite sure what to expect up above the Arctic Circle...
Can anyone offer any words of wisdom? Much of what's available on the net is in Swedish/Norwegian/Finnish :/
Cheers, Nick