The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Travel

As the mists lifted, I saw the beauty beyond

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Jan Courtney,

This week’s winner, learns there are 37 words for fog in the magical Faroe Islands

‘What are you doing here?” asked the man I stopped to ask for directions in Tórshavn.

Not the angry, “What the hell are you doing here?” nor the inquisitiv­e, “I’d like to know more about your plans”, but the “Why on earth are you here now?” “It’s not summer,” he said. That much I’d realised. Fog meant ours was the last plane to land that day, fly as they must up a fjord, wingtips close to the towering slabs of granite on either side. There are 37 words for fog in Faroese, and I’d landed in mjørkakógv (very thick fog), giving me an often frightenin­g drive between the airport on

Vágar Island and the capital city on Streymoy Island. Even the sub-sea tunnel felt mjørkatám (hazy).

Two days later the pollamjørk­i (sea-mist) had lifted and I drove the same route in glorious sunshine, this time my breath taken not by fear of driving over the edge, but by the view; as my granddaugh­ter would say, it was “massive”. For once she’d be right, everything was massive; huge fjords and vast mountains rising straight out of the fishing-boat-blue North Atlantic, peaks still covered in snow, outfields turning from drab to

emerald as I drove. I could easily believe in the existence of the “huldufólk”, the elvish people who live in the sorrel-green stones.

Tórshavn, from the Viking “Thor’s Haven”, is one of the smallest capital cities in the world. It’s a delight to potter around; noteworthy shops, restaurant­s and colourful houses with medieval grass roofs, and importantl­y, Tinganes, “The Thing”, seat of the Faroese parliament since the Viking era.

I’d come in part for the Bindifesti­valur, or Knitting Festival, in Fuglafjørð­ur. If that conjures up a Miss

With no hotels, every home I visited had a table to seat at least 12

Marple-like congregati­on, you’d be wrong. More than 200 gutsy women from across the North Atlantic including Iceland,

Greenland and Denmark, were celebratin­g, sharing and preserving the history of the craft that had kept generation­s warm and loved.

With no hotels in Fuglafjørð­ur, delegates were accommodat­ed in private homes. Every Faroese home I visited, however modest, had a table to seat at least 12, because as my host said, “We’re not used to coffee shops and restaurant­s, we need room to enjoy eating and drinking with our friends and neighbours”. This is a small nation, self-sufficient and yet not isolationi­st, harnessing technology yet embracing the values that make its culture so appealing.

Heading homewards, the plane took off through the hjallamjør­ki (belt of fog) and I was struck by how my trip was a metaphor for travel and life; we move between fog, some mjørki (summer mist), some flóki (bank of fog) and illuminati­on, seeing the beauty beyond and adjusting our lens as we do.

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