It has a nicely restored museum of the estate that used to be the trading center for fishing in this area in the 1800's.
The name of the island (pronounced Sherrinoy) means "the woman's island", possibly because for a long time, the rich trading post was run by a woman who inherited it from her father, and whose husband died early. (she remarried a man 25 her junior a while after that, but from the description at the museum that was more of a business deal.....). There is some debate as to whether "Kjerring" is pejorative e.g "hag", or whether it is only pejorative in the South of Norway and here in the north it just means woman or wife... indeed it has been a lively debate at Maria's and Remi's house....
They were - by far- the richest people around, making a fortune out of underpaying fishermen and selling the very valuable fish all throughout Europe.
The house is full a valuables which had to be imported from all over the world.
Including pretty knick-knacks....
This is the woman in charge - you can see why a 25 year younger man would be attracted to her...
My grandmother had a stove like that!
This is the view to the garden- which was very fancy for the time, and for this part of the world.
The maid quarters where not as nice.....
as the guest quarter..... Notice the wood floor, painted to look like knotted wood.
This is the side of the house that faces the sea- painted white because that was expensive, and so shows of the wealth to incoming visitors. The back is painted the traditional ocher.
Elliot enjoyed the tour and enjoyed running around the barns.
Joe had a lot of time to wander around (because the tour was in Norwegian....), so he took a lot of artsy pictures of all the knick-knacks around the house.
The landscape is quite different from the area around Bodo - because the bay is much shallower, and so the colors are much brighter (the sea and fjords are very clear, but so deep that you can rarely see how clear the water is).
It is indeed a very special spot - and I could see spending summers here (there are a lot of summer cabins here, but also a permanent population of 554 people). Indeed, this entire area looks very livable to me - but I'd have to see it in the winter before making a commitment.....
On the way back to Bodo, we stopped on a lovely cove with pink sand. If you did not know where this was, the colors would have you think it is the Bahamas - but the water is a bit colder..... There were nice rocky hills around the beach, so of course, I had to climb them...(I'm the blue dot on top).
Then one last traditional Norwegian dinner: Salted and smoked lamb chops (Pinnejott), cooked with potatoes in a beer broth for 4 hours, and just crisped on the barbecue. Served with a carrot and rutabaga mash. Again - something we had never had, and delicious!
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