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- 死ぬまでにやっておきたいことリストに追加死ぬまでにやっておきたいことリストから削除
- 共有
- 2024/05/28
- ☁️ 11 °C
- 海抜: 32 m
- フェロー諸島Vága SýslaGásadalurReyðastíggjatangi62°6’26” N 7°26’3” W
Farewell Faroes
5月28日, フェロー諸島 ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C
Our final day in the Faroes began with the ship repositioning during the night to the harbour in Midvagur, on the island of Vagar.
After breakfast we boarded buses to Sandavágar church. It is a light and airy wooden church, with a model of a boat hanging from the beams. We learnt that every church on the Faroes has a boat inside somewhere, some to commemorate loved ones lost to the ocean, a safe return from a voyage, or as a reminder of their link to the sea. There is no point on the Faroes that is more than 5km from the sea, and all but one settlement is on the coast (the other one is on a lake shore)
The village of Gásadalur was our final stop for the day. Until 2003 it was not accessible by road as it was considered too costly to blast through the rock and connect it's 14 residents with the rest of the country. However, following a generous government rethink, engineers completed a 1.7km-long tunnel in February 2003 to bring their blissful isolation to an end.
The tunnel also opened up the number of visitors to Múllafossur Waterfall, possibly the Faroes most famous tourist attraction. It falls 30m off the edge of a cliff directly into the sea and has a convenient viewpoint a short walk away.
On the way back to the ship we walked through the village of Bøur (only residents cars are allowed in the village), and had coffee and cake in a small family run cafe. The village was a base for British soldiers during World War 2, as it is close to the airport.
We set sail for Edinburgh after lunch and had a restful afternoon of presentations and eating, before the crew talent show after dinner.もっと詳しく
John Kalaitzis Superlatives fail me....
John Kalaitzis It looks like a model, it's so perfect...
John Kalaitzis Haha. That's great!