It was no accident that we found ourselves in one of Norway's most breathtaking landscapes: the Sunnmøre Alps. The region was first visited recreationally in the 1800s by the British climbing pioneer William Slingsby, known for teaching Norwegians a new way of engaging with the surrounding fjords, valleys, and peaks. What Norwegians saw then as mundane, Slingsby saw as an endless playground; unclimbed peaks in all directions sparked an infatuation with Sunnmøre.
Slingsby inspired many through his advocacy for the grandeur of Sunnmøre, including us—a small Field Team from Amundsen, who found ourselves trekking through the heart of his beloved landscape. But, getting there was one of the few plans we made for this trip; visitors to Sunnmøre, we knew, benefit from leaving a strict itinerary at home.
One of the few details we did have in mind was to set off from the small village of Sæbø towards a family farm at Skår, that consisted of a cluster of farmhouses nestled into one of the few habitable places on the western end of the Hjørundfjorden, a 22-mile long fjord.