We Lost Our Marbles in Norway

I don’t know about you, but I never gave a lot of thought as to the source of marble. I suppose I figured there were simply marble quarries here and there and that was that. So when I saw “Visit a Marble Mine” on the cruise excursion list, I was all over that like a shooter lining up a dead duck (you would only understand that if you played marbles as a kid). I played marbles a little bit way back when, but my parents made me stop after a slight misunderstanding about how one obtains more cat’s eyes. Anyway, it turns out that only 5% of the world’s marble is actually mined from mines, so that means there’s a 95% chance you didn’t know about marble mines. I think that’s the way the new math works.

The excursion began with a bus ride into the Norwegian countryside. The excursion was supposed to take us on the Atlantic Road, apparently one of the most beautiful roadways in the world, but we wouldn’t have known either way because it was almost always nighttime where we were. The bus stopped to take us on a scenic walk but it was, y’know, dark, so we didn’t see a lot, but what we could and did see was beautiful and peaceful. The monument you see above has a headline that translates to: “In memory of those who died at sea.” I believe that underneath it says, “I died a gruesome, painful, and lonely death in an icy cold ocean and all I got was this lousy monument.”

And no, we didn’t see this scene from the expedition brochure.

But we did see the tunnel leading into the Bergtatt Marble Mine from the bus. While “visiting a marble mine” hadn’t made it onto my bucket list (had I even thought of it, it still would have only qualified for my canister list, which, as everyone knows, is a less important container than a bucket), it was still strangely interesting, and almost disconcerting, to be driving into the side of a mountain, especially without the usual accompaniment of “Hi ho! Hi ho! It’s off to work we go!” I mean, I tried, but all the other tourists just looked at me like I had lost my marbles and Carolyn kept whacking me telling to shut up.

Once we disembarked, they suited us up in hard hats and life vests. Life vests you ask? Well, this particular marble mine has a river running through it, so the mine tour is provided via watercraft. So we got to be sailors and miners in one fell swoop! (Fell swoop is a weird phrase. Stare at it and repeat it: Fell swoop. Fell swoop. Weird. Although it wouldn’t be a bad name for a rock band. “And heeeeeere’s Fell Swooooooooop!” The crowd goes wild!)

The watercraft looked more like crates than boats, but I assumed they were sea-worthy -er, mine-worthy -er, river-in-a-mine-worthy. Anyway, these caves were created by the water and mining and they are still mining in other parts of the mountain, but this section was turned into a tourist attraction and a concert venue as well as being a great place to hide a dead body.

So off we sailed into the depths of the mountain, feeling rather like the dwarfs in Lord of the Rings, except taller, and less swarthy, and mostly not fictitious, and glad that we weren’t instead feeling anything like one of the dwarfs in Snow White, mostly because the Lord of the Rings dwarfs could kick their butts, which would give a whole new meaning to the name “Bashful.”

Gimli and Glóin.

While the rafts sailed through the mountain, peaceful music wafted over us from deep within the caves. I think the song was “Sweet Child of Mine,” albeit with violins and no singing and with a completely different set of notes and no guns or roses anywhere. But it has “mine” in the title so they should have. I actually thought about the “It’s a Small World” boat ride from Disneyland as we meandered through the still water, although I was extremely grateful that they didn’t play that particular song. It’s the mother of all earworms.

Apparently the marble –”It’s a small world after all!”– from this particular mine is a lot denser than the marble they usually use for statues so it normally takes too long to create a statue from this particular marble, -“It’s a small world after all!”- so when they do of course they use it to make a woman with her boob hanging out. Psssht, men… am I right?

The ceiling was occasionally low enough –”It’s a small world after all!”– to bonk your head if you weren’t careful, ergo the hard hats. So these are close-ups as to what marble looks like before it’s mined as well as what my head looks like post-bonk. “It’s a small world after all!”

They showed off some marble creations which they could make because they weren’t going to sell them so it didn’t matter if it took forever to make, but get this: most of the marble mined here is actually used to make glossy paper. –”It’s a small world after all!”– Who would’ve thunk? Like the origins of marble, I hadn’t given a lot of thought as to how glossy paper is made (my friend Mark Meyer would know though, since he’s a paper maven). So when I heard that, I was astonished. Amazed. Astounded. “It’s a small world after all!” Dumbfounded. Verklempt. And ready to blow my brains out if I hear “It’s a small world after all!” in my head one more time. I’m just sayin’, if this is my last blog entry you’ll know why.

At the end of the tour, we were served some marble soup (I think) and a viewing of a promotional and educational nature from Bergtatt Opplevelser, the mining company. That hall is also where they have some concerts. I was a little baffled as to how well a concert might work there because I couldn’t understand most of what they were saying, and it was even mostly in English (I think). It all sounded rather echo-y. The video production and presentation was also kind of cutely amateurish, as if some miners had put it all together one drunken night without the help of anyone who knew anything about making a presentation. But they meant well (despite the depiction of the Nazi salute there on the screen), and overall we had a good time.

As a result of our trip inside a marble mine, Carolyn now wants to decorate our next kitchen like this. At least with this, we won’t ever lose our marbles! She proofreads and works on these blogs with me so I’m anticipating a big whack on my shoulder after she reads that she wants this kitchen.

I’ll finish up this entry with a short tour of Hammerfest, voted by me as one of the top five city names in all the world. No one screws with anyone from Hammerfest, even if they were only educated in a videregående skole (which means high school). The school doesn’t need a mascot. As soon as any rival school sees the word Hammerfest they pretty much run away screaming with their hands over their heads. Also, notice the straight lines on the hill? Those are to help prevent avalanches. Landslides and avalanches are the natural hazards in Norway responsible for most losses of human life. I believe killing oneself due to It’s a Small World earworms comes in third.

As you can see, not only is it somewhat industrial –Norway is awash in oil and gas resources and has done an outstanding job of protecting them for the benefit of all Norwegians– but the town itself is just as cute as a bug, with snow-covered houses covering the hills overlooking where the Norwegian Sea meets the Barents Sea for a spot of tea. Hammerfest is pretty much at the tippy top of Norway, making it the northernmost town called Hammerfest in the entire world.

That also made it one of the colder places on our trip, hitting 17°F (-8°C) while we were there. So we donned our green sausage coats and inspected the local ambulance before walking a couple of hundred meters to a monument and then slinking back to the ship, where we stomped the snow and ice from our boots and and loudly demanded hot chocolate.

The monument itself is a “meridian column” (there goes another thing off the bucket list!) and commemorates the scientific measurements needed to see how obese the earth has become and whether it needs to go on a diet. Speaking of which, do you know the only large country (as opposed to all those small island countries where they give birth to pre-sumos) with a higher obesity rate than the United States? Kuwait. Maybe they should stop kuwaiting for take-out.

As you can see the views and scenery from the area around the monument was absolutely gorgeous, so both the marker and the scenery made it a monumental visit despite the brevity of the stop.

And off we sailed again into the wild dark blue yonder, ready for our next excursion while viewing scenes like the below from the comfort of our ship, hot chocolate in hand and “It’s a small world after all!” worming around in my brain. Dammit!

(Scroll down to see previous entries.)

It’s a Small World after all!

One thought on “We Lost Our Marbles in Norway

  1. Great summary of your visit! We enjoyed the heck out of our Olso trip last year too.

    By the way, I don’t know how marble paper is made, but I do know sugar cane paper!

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