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The people and the sea

Five things to know about the Faroe Islands

- AFP

The Faroe Islands are an archipelag­o located halfway between Iceland and Norway in the North Atlantic. Some 50,000 people live in 17 of the total 18 islands.

Here are five things to know about the Danish autonomous territory, which stretches almost 1,400 square kilometers (560 square miles):

The 37 words for fog

It’s not easy to escape the fog in the Faroe Islands, where the breathtaki­ng mountains, waterfalls and fjords resemble a scene from The Lord of the Rings.

For example, “Pollamjork­i” means “mist, which lies along the sea, in bays and through the valleys, and covers the foot of the mountains while the sky above is clear.”

The local saying “If you don’t like the weather, just wait five minutes,” fits perfectly in a place that can undergo multiple changes in a very short period of time.

Communicat­ion is facilitate­d by an extensive network of road and undersea tunnels, ferries, and cheap helicopter rides for inhabitant­s on the more remote islands.

Fishing industry

In the Faroes, the sea is never more than five kilometers away. So it goes without saying that its residents are largely dependent on it.

Wild fish such as mackerel, herring, cod and farmed fish like salmon accounted for 96 percent of the territory’s total exports in 2017, or 8.4 billion kroner ($1.3 billion).

An increase in Icelandic and Faroese mackerel and herring quotas provoked a sharp conflict with the European Union (including Denmark, the territory’s patron) between 2010 and 2014.

An EU embargo on Faroese fish harmed the economy of the territory, which then turned to other markets.

Russia has become the Faroe Islands’ main trading partner, accounting for 29 percent of the archipelag­o’s exports last year, compared to 3.2 percent in 2010.

The trade was also boosted in the wake of the Ukraine crisis when Russia started to boycott food products coming from the EU, of which the Faroe Islands is not a member.

Sheep craze

Some 80,000 sheep graze semifreely in the Faroe Islands, which in the local language originatin­g from Old Norse means “Sheep Islands.”

While the number of sheep exceeds that of the total population, the animals are not enough to satisfy an appetite for their meat as the Faroese import between 500 and 600 tons of lamb from Iceland and New Zealand each year. Vikings

The origin of the first settlers remains uncertain although archaeolog­ists believe they arrived still

morA between the 4th and 5th century. Some reports point to Irish monks having lived there before the 9th ple b century when the Vikings arrived have from Norway. 10.1

The Faroese capital, Torshavn, tion which was founded around that amo time, means “Thor’s Port” referring to the god of strength and thunder in Old Norse mythology.

The islands came under the control of the former Danish-Norwegian kingdom in 1380 and later became exclusivel­y Danish in 1814 at the end of the Napoleonic Wars when Norway passed under the tutelage of Sweden.

The islands obtained autonomy in 1948.

No country for old men?

Despite a high retirement age of 67 years and generous pensions, many Faroese

choose to work on for many re years. Around 47.6 percent of the peobetween the ages of 65 and 74 e some form of activity against percent in the EU, a proporn that even rises to 54.2 percent ong men in the archipelag­o.

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 ?? Photos: VCG ?? Faroe Islands Left: A young girl poses for a picture on the Faroe Islands.
Photos: VCG Faroe Islands Left: A young girl poses for a picture on the Faroe Islands.

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