CHB Mail

Double dose of Norse life

Norsewood holding Viking Festival and Norway Day

- Leanne Warr

When Eva Renbjor was a little girl in Norway, her mother dressed her up in a traditiona­l costume and took her into town. It was May 17, a special day in Norway as everyone was celebratin­g Norway Day — the day the country gained its independen­ce from Sweden back in 1814.

Renbjor says the first Norway Day she remembered she hadn’t started school yet, so she was about 4.

The family watched the parades that day and then went to a restaurant for sausages and ice cream.

It’s a tradition that everyone in Norway observes, even the sausage, which is described as very like a frankfurte­r, wrapped in bread, with ketchup on top.

“Everyone eats three or four sausages each,” Renbjor says.

Her family lives in a small town outside Trondheim, the third-largest city in Norway.

Renbjor says her family doesn’t usually go into the city to watch the parades but they do have smaller ones in her home town.

“Very often I [would] work in a cabin on May 17 in a forest.”

Those who like to take a walk in the forest can share a good meal, which includes the sausage and “a lot of cake”.

“It’s a family day,” says Renbjor, who has been living in Norsewood for about the last four years, although she has been back and forth between

Norway and New Zealand for about 20 years.

She is also the organiser of the Viking Festival to be held on the weekend of May 14 and 15.

While May 17 was considered a holiday in Norway, those in Norsewood chose to mark Norway Day on the closest Sunday to it.

The village, 20km north of Dannevirke, was originally settled by Norwegians and will celebrate its 150th anniversar­y this year.

The day in Norsewood uses many of the same traditions, where they hold a cake competitio­n and children from the local school dress up in

Norwegian costumes.

Norwegians from all around NZ were also invited to come and celebrate the day, including Honorary Consul General Graeme Mitchell.

This year’s Norway Day will be held the same weekend as the Viking festival, which was postponed from Waitangi weekend due to Covid.

Renbjor says the festival will include music as well as demonstrat­ions of axe throwing, spear throwing, tug o’ war and speakers talking about life as a Viking. She says she thought it would be great to do the two together, as Vikings also showed an interest in the Norway Day tradition.

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? A demonstrat­ion of craft-making at a Viking Festival in Norsewood.
Photo / Supplied A demonstrat­ion of craft-making at a Viking Festival in Norsewood.

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