Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We visited Tromso, Norway and saw the Northern Lights there but in March. We went to Lapland in January and did not see them but it was cloudy the evening we were there and we didn't do a specific tour for the lights. Happy to answer any questions on either trip if you have them.
Hi, OP here! Could you tell me how you got to both Tromso and Lapland? Did you fly first to Oslo/Helsinki and then take another plane up north, or did you rent a car, etc.? Thank you!
Yes, we flew to Oslo and then Tromso and same for Finland, first Helsinki and then Rovaniemi (fly FinnAir - they have the best blueberry juice!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We went to Iceland then and did not see the Northern Lights. But we loved Iceland anyway
Same here!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We visited Tromso, Norway and saw the Northern Lights there but in March. We went to Lapland in January and did not see them but it was cloudy the evening we were there and we didn't do a specific tour for the lights. Happy to answer any questions on either trip if you have them.
Hi, OP here! Could you tell me how you got to both Tromso and Lapland? Did you fly first to Oslo/Helsinki and then take another plane up north, or did you rent a car, etc.? Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:We visited Tromso, Norway and saw the Northern Lights there but in March. We went to Lapland in January and did not see them but it was cloudy the evening we were there and we didn't do a specific tour for the lights. Happy to answer any questions on either trip if you have them.
Anonymous wrote:If you are solely doing the trip for Northern Lights please research this ahead of time. Solar activity by month and location as well as average weather and cloud cover by location - there are websites and apps looking at this. Sections in travel guides are devoted to this as well. Read to maximize your chances. To my knowledge there is a much greater chance of seeing them in northern Norway (and specific towns in Scandinavia) vs. Iceland due to probability of cloud cover. That said, Iceland is a fantastic destination.
Anonymous wrote:I think especially if you can swing early October (or even late September), Norway/Sweden/Finland would be beautiful (and pretty affordable compared to winter). Also - while I get that the governments still use the Lapland term, Lapp is a derogatory term for the Sami people (think “Eskimo”) and the Sami don’t use the term.
Anonymous wrote:We went to Iceland then and did not see the Northern Lights. But we loved Iceland anyway