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Kungsleden in Sweden
from Abisko to Kvikkjokk 183 km (without bus)
 

Information
 
Season
time
Getting there/back
Accommodation
Maps
Boat
Food
Midges
Difficulties
Flora and Fauna
other trails
Links
Questions? Hints!
 
The Kungsleden ( King's path) is the most known long distance hiking trail in Sweden. Here is the popular northern part described. 
 

 

Etappes
 

Abisko-Vakkotavara
Salto-Kvikkjokk
to Hemavan

Prices: 1 Euro = 9,3 Krones = 0,7 Brit. Pound = 1,25 Dollar
( 100 Kr. =  about 11 Euro = 7 brit Pound = 13,5 Dollar ). Prices are from 2006.
 

Season to travel:
The huts are open in summer and winter and close usually in the second week of September. (2006 at the 18th of September).
In early July there could be snow and the brooks are still full of water, which makes some difficulties to cross some of them. From mid July to the end of August is high season, also the midges are very nasty. The first two September weeks are mostly recommended, the huts are empty and there are no midges anymore and the fjell is illuminating in red, green and yellow colours, but the weather is not stable. In the second September week the Sami people stop the boat transfer at the lake Sitojaure, that means up to 12 km rowing.

 

How many time it takes:
the 113 km hike from Abisko to Vakkotavare could be done in 4 - 8 days, 6 days would be comfortable. From Saltoluokta to Kvikkjokk you have to calculate with 4 days, three days is possible, if you get a quick boat transfer.

 

Getting there:
to Stockholm
get a cheap flight from your country, but look for landing at the airport Stockholm-Arlanda, where you have the connection flights with flynordic. Ryanair for example goes to another remote airport.
Suggestion: If you have time in Arlanda at terminal 1,2 is a canteen with a cheap and gorgeous lunch buffet for only 69 krones (8 Euro).

Staying overnight in Stockholm
Stockholm is one of the prettiest capitals of the world. It is advised to pre-book a room all year, especially in summer. I slept in the youth hostel, which was rather cheap (20 Euro) and central situated. The famous Youth Hostel ship was under renovation, it is the most eccentric Youth hostel on the earth. The Airport Arlanda Fast Train charges one-way 200 kr (22 Euro, 22 Min. ), going by bus is about half the price (95 KR/10 Euro, 40 min. ), tickets for the bus are sold at a desk before the exit.

further on to Laponia
The cheapest way to go to Laponia is to flight with the low budget airline  flynordic.com/ which offers flights from Arlanda to Kiruna, Lulea from 56 Euro one way. I paid 120 Euro for flying to Kiruna and back from Lulea. Another carrier is nordicregional.se/ with flights to Gallivare.

Yellow House click to enlarge  train/bus Kiruna/Narvik at Abisko Tourstation
From Kiruna airport to town is no bus transfer, except one around noon. At other times the transfer is organisized only by taxis, which is quite expensive (250 KR). You can walk (app. 8 km) or ask someone to take you along to town. My trip was sponsored by a Swedish construction company, thank you! There is a Youth Hostel in town (no email booking!) and a hostel called "Yellow house". Both are around 15 minutes walk far from the train or bus station (at different sites but both near the town hall). Look for the city maps in the many brochures, which laid around - for example in the Yellow House where I stayed ). The owner of the "Yellow House" offers beds for 150 Kr, but only if all single and double rooms are booked out. Expect 300 Kr. From Kiruna goes a train/ bus at 7.40 a.m. in the morning from the train station to the Abisko Tour station (station after Abisko - village). The fare is 90 Kr. It is 15 minutes walk from the Yellow house otr the sam from the Youth hostal. Town-maps were in the many leaflets lying around in my hostel.

Train: Rail: sj.se
There are cheaper internet offers 3 month before. Sometimes it is more cheaper to travel from Stockholm Central then from the Airport Arlanda, even if you calculate the bus trip to the town.

back to Stockholm
from Kvikkjokk was a bus to Jokkmokk early in the morning at 5.40 a.m.  (in July and August also at 5.00 p.m. ) with possible connection to Lulea (a bigger town of a population of 80.000 ). The single fare was 165 KR to Jokkmokk and the same from Jokkmokk to Lulea, but its cheaper to book from Kvikkjokk directly to Lulea, which is 230 Kr.

Lulea

Kyrkstad Gamelstads  Vrandrahem  in the kitchen of the Vrandrahem
Staying budget overnight is possible at the Vrandrahem in Luela (dorm bed 150 KR has kitchen). The employee at the bus station was very helpful, he offered me free town-map from Lulea, a timetable of the airport bus and the description, where the Vandrahem or other accommodation is located.
Getting there is quite easy, you follow the shopping mall until the town house, where you go to the left until you see a gas station. The "Vrandrahem" is at the other side of the road, where the gas station is, in direction to the right. Some meters further on is a bridge and that is also the road to the airport (12 km). The airport bus stops in direction to the bridge only about 250 m from the "Vrandrahem". The fare is 65 KR) and the bus arrives early enough to check in for the next plane. My bus was scheduled to be at 6.55 at the airport and my flight was at 7.30. That was early enough. If you come from the airport and want to stay at the Vrandrahem, you also can get off at the town house.
In the shopping mall was a Thai restaurant with a delicious lunch buffet for 65 KR (one soft drink and coffee included). The public library has a free internet access (if places are available), but you have to pay for using the rest rooms.

Worth a visit is the Kyrkstadt Gammelstad about 15 km from Lulea, take Bus No. 9 ( 30 Min., 27 KR one way ), which is listed as a Unesco Heritage Site.

Links:
cheap flights from Stockholm to Kiruna, Galliväre or Lulea : flynordic.com,
Bus in Laponia: ltnbd.se
Rail: sj.se  all tickets,: connex.se (train and bus Internet booking)


 

Accommodation at the Kungsleden

interior of a hut
Every 10 to 20 km you find huts of the Swedish STF (Svenska Turist Föreningen = Swedisch Tourist Association). Some hut warden told me, that noone is refused for staying in the huts, but sometimes people have to sleep on the floor (without discount).  The accommodation price is 240 - 260 KR with IYH-membership and 100 Kr more without being a member. The German membership is cheaper (20 Euro) than the Swedish membership, which is availabe for around 300 KR also in the huts.

The huts have a kitchen with gas stoves and kitchen utensils, but no food (except what people leave there). There are no showers nor electricity.
In almost each second hut is a small shop which sells food, but prices are quite high ( for example noodles 25 KR).
You are obliged to clean all the utensils and facilities, also the floor and you have to fetch fresh water etc. Some huts have a Sauna, which costs a small fee extra (50 KR), but Swedish people are more prudish than their reputation is, normally there are no mixed Sauna sessions.

It is allowed to camp everywhere (except in the national park Abisco), but a fee of 40 KR ( 60 KR non IYH members) is levied for using the huts but ot the beds.

Links:
Huts FTS: svenskaturistforeningen.se/


 

Maps:
you need the Fjell maps  BD 6 (Abisko-Kebnekaise), BD 8 (Kebnekaise Saltoluokta) and  BD 10 (Sarek). These maps are sold in the huts (each = 120 KR). You can come along without map, despite the fact, that the Kungsleden is not enough signposted everywhere. And at places where you could loose the way, the map doesn't help much. At the start is a gate (see down), wher a big map is displayed, some people took a photo from, for using the map from the Dig cam. If you buy a map, take that one from the Sarek, you might use it a second time by hiking the Padjelantaleden.
A good map is at  inatur.se (click sök i karta, but don' block the pop-up function)


 

Boat transfer
There are four lakes, which have to been crossed by boat. One is at the first part before Vakkotavare at the hut Teusajaure. It is  a short trip and the hut warden charge 50 Kr for crossing by motor boat, but rowing (free) is done in 20 minutes (one tour), if there is no intense wind. The next regular boat traffic is from Kebnats to Saltoluokta at 7.20 p.m. after the bus trip. The fee is 100 Kr (for IYH members 70 KR).
At the part Saltoluokta-Kvikkjokk are to cross the Sintojaure (4 km rowing) and the next days the lake at Aktse (2 km rowing ). The fee is 110 KR with motor boat. These tours are served by the Sami people who have the right of use of this area. They turn down the boat service as they like for example for chasing and gathering their reindeers mostly in the second September week. It is hardly exactly arranged with the opening times of the huts. The Sami people on one hand don't want to miss the income from the boat transfer, on the other hand they don't like too much tourism, which in their opinion disturbs their reindeers. In my opinion the reindeers were used to hikers.

Terms of use of the rowing boats
If you find two boats on your side, you are lucky. Otherwise you have to cross the lake, fetch one of the two boats at the other side, must row back with two boats and can then cross the lake with one boat. It must be guaranteed that one boat is at each side of the lake for crossing. If there is no boat then two boats are coming. You also mustn't row back, if you meat a boat on the lake in the opposite direction. It means 12 km rowing at the Sintojaure.

stranded
If the wind and the waves intensive rowing is problematical. I had the problem that midst on the lake some wind was coming and I wasn't able to stand rowing against the resulting streaming for a long time, so I was floating on an isolated isle in the lake, where I had to wait for hours for the wind was fading.


 

Food:
In Saltoluokta is a restaurant, at each second hut is a small shop, where you can buy some basic food, prices are high. You can drink the water from brooks, if there is no danger of faeces from reindeer. In September you can pick everywhere lots of blueberries and lingonberries.

 

Midges and mosquitoes
are a plague in July and August, after the first frost in end of August they are away. Nasty are especially the small midges, which are circulating in swarms at someone's head particularly in forest areas. Some repellent should help. The higher the area and the more wind is, the fewer are the midges and mosquitoes.

 

Flora and Fauna (incompletely)

reindeer  Elk in Sarek (Photo Peter Mayer) here more sarja.de,
aside mosquitoes and midgets there are bears, elks and reindeers. It's very unlikely that you see a bear and if you are lucky, an elk cross your way, but mostly you will see them in the distance, if you see them at all. But you surely will see reindeers, which are semi-wild held by the Sami people and are chased and gathered together in September. You sometimes will cross wire netted fences that are for chasing the reindeers. Often the animals crossed my path in a distance of only 5- 10 meters and always they turned round for looking at me curiously in a more saver distance of around 100 meters.
birch mushroom  linglonberries and lichen  (top left)
In harvest there are a lot of birch mushrooms, which are eatable, especially in the Abisko NP. Lots of blueberries and lingonberries are growing on the fjell. You can mix up the blueberries with the black crowberries, which are eatable, but taste not good. There are other red berries, which taste also for nothing but are poisonous if you eat lots of them (taste some of them and nothing happened).
The lichen and moss are a indicator for clean air. In Germany lichen are mapped out for measuring the pollution level of the air, some lichen grow only in a certain pollution level.

 

Difficulty level and walking experience
The Kungsleden is easy to walk. There are only some few modest ascents to master. If there are fords to wade through they are shallow or there are bridges. Sometimes the terrain is stony, but not much. At swamplands are planks for easy hiking and for environmental reasons.



Sections (are divided as I did them)

Abisko - Vakkotavara (110 km)

Day 1
Abisko - Alesjaure 34 km ( to Abiskojaure 14 km)

the start of the Kungsleden   mediation place click to enlarge
Doing this long way might be exhausting, but you can do it, if you start early. Recommended at nice weather. Staying at the Abisko Fjell Station costs about 220 Kr. The trail starts at the opposite side of the road, where the bus from Kiruna -Narvik stops. The information center is nothing special, no particular leaflets nor maps for free or to buy, but you can use the toilette before your start. After some meters the gate above appears, there is a card of the mediation places, some who hadn't bought yet a map, took a picture with their Digi cam for having a photo instead of a map.
Then you walk around 14 km through birch forest, two bridges has to be passed and after 8 km you reach a bigger lake, a nice place for swimming in summer. After that the trail leads for 4 km in some distance along the lake. At the end of the lake is at the right side the suspension bridge to the first hut Abiskojaure. ("Jaure" means lake in the Sami language).

(possibly Day 2 Abiskojaure -Alesjaure 20 km)

If you continue, you don't have to turn left over the bridge, but have to hike through the forest. You reach a hill and walk some meters on planks.

Don't cross the river here! click to enlarge
Unfortunately the way is badly signposted at this section, also the BD-map is not much of help. I followed the wide path and landed at the brook on the photo. Thought of having to cross it, because there was the red cross on the opposite river side. Wrong, I should have to keep at the left river side until there is a bridge over the river. Look at the map, you have to go between two peaks up to a saddle. It is well known that many people lost the way at this place, but no-one had have the idea to put there a sign "bro=bridge".

The Kungleden leads between the two mountain peaks up to a pass and turned at the top gradually to the right until you see a lake area in the distance, which you  approach slowly angled parallel. Many times you walk on planks, because it is also going slowly downwards, you can make kilometers. After having passed some lakes you reach the rapids at the northern shore of the Alesjaure (= Ales lake), where is also a boat landing stage.
From here it is six kilometers to the hut at the end of the Alesjaure.

Day 2
Alesjaure-Sälka 25 km (to Tjäktja hut 13 km)

View from the Tjäkta pass
you continue walking along the river delta across a suspension bridge and after 10 km the Kungsleden turns left up to the Tjäktja pass, which is a moderate climbing up. At the right side before the pass is the Tjäkta hut. You can hike easily at one day from Alesjaure to Sälka, it is recommended especially at sunny days. On top of the Tjäktja pass is a refuge hut, you can use for staying overnight, if you are late and tired.
From the top you have a great view down to the Tjäkta valley, that you will follow the next two days. After 3-4 hours you reach the Sälka hut. If you can spare one day you might climb the Sälka (1.865m - 15 km), which gives a nice view around on clear days.

Alternatively you can walk from Alesjaure to Vistas (18 km) and then to Nallo (9 km) back to Sälka (more 9 km). This hike is in more mountainous surrounding.

Also the trip from Tjäktja to Nallo (9 km) and to Day 3
Sälka - Kaitumjaure 24 km (to Singi 12 km)

Valley of the Tjäkta river  View to the mountains of the Kebnekaise
You follow the next two days the valley of Tjäkta, after 12 km you reach the hut Singi.

Roundtrip Tip No. 1 !
After Sälka the path branchs off to the right to Ritsem (62 km) you reach in three days with a stop at the huts Hukejaure (25km) and Sitasjaure
(19 km) to Ritsem (22 km).From there you can follow the Padjelantaleden to Kvikkjokk (155km), the end point of the popular part of the northern Kungsleden. This variation from Abisko to Kvikkjokk is part of the long distance trail Nordkalotteden, which begins in Finland and leads through all three Scandinavian countries (Norway, Sweden, Finland).
It is thinkable to return to the Kungsleden and turn to the right for hiking to the Kebnekaise (see below) and to Nikkaluokta (35 km). From Nikkaluokta you can return by bus to Kiruna. This tour from Abisco to Nikkaluokta with both the Padjelantaleden and the most popular part of the Kungsleden takes about 4 weeks and is 440 km hiking.

Roundtrip Tip No. 2!
Shortly before Singi leads a path to the Kebnekaise Fjällstation with restaurant (15 km) (Link: sftkebnekaise.com ). The peak Kebnekaise is the highest mountain is Sweden ( 2.117 m), which you can climb. From there it is more 20 km to Nikkaluokta which has a bus connection to Kiruna.

Staying on the Kungsleden you hike along the Tjäkta river, after passing an old Sami kote you reach a birch forest. At the beginning the path splits and  both path ar red signed (a sign there would be advisable). You have to turn to the river downwards until you reach a bridge over the Tjäkta.  From here it is half a hour to the hut Kaitumjaure, which is beautiful situated at the lake and which has a Sauna (50 kr).If you have time you can climb the Sánjarcohkka, from where you have views to the Kebnekaise and Sarek in the distance.

view from the hut Kaitumjaure


Day 4
Kaitumjaure - Teusajaure 10 km (to Vakkotavara 25 km and about 20 - 60 min rowing)

The path leads to the right, across a bridge and then straight on over the mountain ridge and down at the other side. There is the hut Teusajaure at a lake and a waterfall. The hut warden takes you with a motor boat (50 Kr) to the other side of the lake, but rowing takes only 20 minutes (1 hour if you have to row three times (look for the terms of use here ), slightly done, if the wind is not intense.

You can make the trip from Kaitumjaure to Vakkotavara in 8-10 hrs and catch the bus in Vakkotavara at 4.25 p.m. for the ferry in Kebnats at 5.00 p.m.

Day 5
Teusajaure - Vakkotavara 15 km

descent at Vakkotavara
the way over the mountain ridge could be seen from the hut. It is rather boring. After one third of the way a sign " "Bro" shows to a bridge, which you have to use. Later you have to wade through a ford, but this is not very difficult. At the end the Kungsleden leads to the hut Vakkotavara, which lies in front of the bus stop of the bus Ritsem-Galliväre (4.25 p.m. to Galliväre (165 Kr, Kebnats 35 KR) and at noon to Ritsem).




 

Bus Vakkotavara -Saltoluokta (30 Km)

in front of the hut Vakkotavara
All hikers go by bus from Vakkotavara  to Saltuluokta. The bus leaves at 4.25 p.m. in Vakkotavara for Kebnats (35 KR) and further on to Galliväre (165 Kr). The other direktion to Ritsem is served at noon time. The bus stops at a small shop for 20 minutes and is connected with the ferry boat to Saltoluokta. The fare is 70 Kr as a IYH-member and for non-members 100 Kr.

Saltoluokta is a vast resort with huts, hot showers, Sauna, shop and restaurant. A bed in a dorm costs 210 Kr, other rooms were available. Breakfast buffet is 75 KR, but it was rather simple, compared the buffets in Norwegian huts. Dinner was 255 KR (without beverage but with coffee after dinner). Who is thinking of tons of Swedish plain housewife food is wrong, this restaurant is a well known gourmet temple in this area. The hors d'oevre was two spoonful of salad from red beet and reindeer meat, the main dish was a small piece of fish from the lakes around with two small potatoes and a kind of hollandaise on it and the dessert was two small vanilla ice scoops with some hot yellow molte berries. Not much, but all delicious to a fair price!




 

Saltoluokta-Kvikkjokk

Day 6
Saltoluakta - Sintojaure (20 km)

Fjell 
The Kungsleden pass through a forest first, then path some crossings, but you have to go straight on following the red crosses (winter way) until you reach a well signed four way crossing, which signs the Kungsleden definitely from the winter way. Later the trail is flat and you can see far in the distance. Half the way is a refuge hut. It is a pleasant walk. At the end it is going slightly downwards to the hut at the lake Sintojaure. The peak before the hut could be climbed as it has nice views to the valley and the neighboured Sarek area.

Some meters from the hut is a Sami village. If you cross the lake in the afternoon/evening, there is a place for camping and a refuge hut at the other side of the lake. To Aktse it is only 9 km, but it is going steep upwards, that is very strenuous and takes a lot of time. The same the last two kilometers downwards.
 

 
The Sami
are a tribe, who lives in Laponia in the north of the three Scandinavian countries (Finland, Norway and Sweden) and are living from reindeers since hundreds of years. The mayority of them today lives in Stockholm or elsewhere and don't live from reindeers. The farming of reindeers today is again attractive, since the EU subsidize each reindeer with 20 Euro. Reindeers are nowadays chased by helicopters. The number of reindeers have increased in the last ten years. The Same minority are fighting on courts with those, who have rights on forests, because they prefer for this area unusual mono-culture of forests, which makes harvesting forest more easy and lucrative for them, but can't feed much reindeers. The foresters claimed, there are unnatural too much reindeers today, because of the EU subventions. 
The Same minority claimed, there were first there, having a long tradition of living from reindeers and that their land is their property, the origine legal right is wrongly refused by the Swedish state, which gave them only a right of land use for traditional living. 
That right of use is the reason that the FTS must ask the permission of the Same minority, even if they only want to build a small Sauna hut, in addition to the existing huts. That permission depends mostly on the political mood at the moment. 
The Swedish mayjority (means here the non Same) don't like these troubles and claimed that the Same only want to make money from their descendence, in reality they are in their behaviours not other as the rest of the Sweden population.

Day 7
Sitojaure - Aktse ( 9 km + 4 km boat)

Aktse with Skerfe peak
The crossing with motor boat costs 110 KR. You could row on qualm and sunny days, it takes app. 1 hrs (look boat transfer). I had to row three times, when the Sami people have stopped their motorboat service the day before, because of chasing and gathiering their reindeers. So I had to row three times. Unfortunately an intensive wind and a flow suddenly appears that I can't stand rowing against. I was drifted on an island in the lake and had to wait some hours for making the last kilometer. At the beginning of the rowing there is a shallow area with rocks, it is a little tricky to find a path through after you certainly run on to the rocks in the shallow water. After the second buoy you might find not the third one, but you will surely find later other ones which mark the way. At the end of the lake you have to turn right and you can see the other boat(s).
Descent to Aktse
After the lake the Kungsleden ascents steeply to a ridge, the terrain was very stony. Reaching the ridge you have to look first, where the Kungsleden continues. After that is a rather flat part with views to the lakes in the distance until you reach the sign depicting to the Skerfe.

If you have enough time (5 hrs) you can leave your backpack (without valuables) at the sign and walk to the viewpoint Skerfe. It is one of the finest viewpoints to the Sarek and the valley Rapadalen in this area. From the cliff edge it is falling down some hundred meters.

sign Skerfe
From the sign Skerfe it is app. 45 min walk steeply downwards to the hut Aktse. Aktse is the most used starting point for trips to the Sarek area. The area around the hut is very nice situated, a fine place for relaxing some days.
 
 
 
The Sarek
the national park Sarek is a high mountain area with fjell, which is neither inhabited nor made easily accessible like the Kungsleden. Who wants to go into the Sarek needs a map, must be physically and mental fit and ought to have enough food and solid camping gears. It should be very nice there, some fans of the Sarek spend all year some weeks there. There are three bridges in the Sarek, where insurmountable rivers must be crossed. 
Warning: Don't underestimate the dangers! Last years a man was falling into a crevasse of a glacier in front of his wife, he never was found (don't cross glaciers). Some plaths are dangerous at slippery weather. 
Links: rapadalen.de (nice pictures, maps and tours, the author answers questions )

 

Day 8
Aktse - Parte (21 km and 3 km boat)

river delta
Around 1 km from the hut is the motor boat stage. The fare is 110 Kr. If the weather is calm and there is only one way to row, you should consider rowing, because the area is fine. At the other end of the Lake is a refuge hut and some kilometers in pine forest follows. Then the path ascends to wonderful views back. You are going for a long time along the ridge, another refuge hut will appear and you will have nice views down to the neighboured meandering valley. You pass a suspension bridge and reach a kind of ravine. At the end of that ravine you descend down the timberline through pine forest and pass another three bridges until you reach the Parte hut, nice situated in forest at a lake.
 

Day 9
Parte - Kvikkjokk (17 km)

hut Parte  from the Kvikkjokk cafe window
the Kungsleden is going at that part only through forests. That part could be done in 4-5 hours. Halfway there is a nice lake. Somewhere is a path to the right to the old summer camp of the Sami, where they had chased and gathered their reindeers for slaughter them. Today noone is living there anymore. At the end of that part of the Kungsleden you reach a fortified path, which leads to a parking place and the Kvikkjokk hut (210 Kr dorm bed). There are hot showers, electricity, a shop and a kind of cafè. the cafè served pytt y pana or a small pie, mot delicious nor making fed up. But it is a nice view through the window at the river.

The bus leaves at the church very early in the morning (5.45 a.m., in August also in the afternoon at 4.30 p.m.) to Jokkmokk (165 Kr). If you go further on by bus, booking the whole trip is cheaper than paying eaach section. I paid for Lulea 230 Kr (instead of 2 times 165 Kr). In the morning there is a direct connectin to Lulea.

Who wanted to hike the Padjelantaleden from Kvikkjokk must get a boat transfer to trailhead , in the Fjell station Kvikkjokk is more information about it.




 

other sections of the Kungsleden
the Northern Kungsleden leads further on to Hämavan for another 230 km (+25 km boat)
Kvikkjokk - Jäkkvik, app.70 km +25 km boat, 4 days, map BD 14, bus connection in Jäkkvikk,  at least one camping is necessary
Jäkvikk- Ammarnäs, app. 85 km, 4 days, map BD 16, bus connection in Ammarnäs
Ammarnäs -Hemavan, app.78 km, 3-4 days, Fjell map AC2, bus connection in Hemavan

 

other trails in Sweden
 

Kungsleden (Süd/South) 15 days, 350 km  Sälen-Storlien   http://free.pages.at/magi/,
Padjelantaleden 144 km, 9 days Ritsem - Kvikkjokk / Lappland nur Notizblock 
Sarek Querung/crossing rapadalen.de
Bohusleden  360 km,  Lindome- Strömstadt  nordwinde.de,
Tjustleden 9 days,  Mörtfors-Falerum
Pilgrimsleden  53 km, 3 days Dalsland, Church Holms - Edsleskog/Amal britta-mueller.net

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Links:
svenskaturistforeningen.se/ FTS- huts, padjelanta.com/ Padjelantaleden,
STFturist, Tourist assocciaton  with maps
Busses in northern Sweden: ltnbd.se,
Rail: sj.se  all tickets,
Cheap flights from Stockholm to Kiruna etc. : flynordic.com,

others about Sweden:
skandinavien.net , visit-sweden.com, ig-n.de, si.se (Kultur), schwedenoutback.com , nordskandinavien.de , sj.se (Zug), vasttrafik.se, resplus.se (Bus), merasverige.nu, laponia.nu, environ.se, turism.se, visit-sweden.com, sweden.de, sverigeturism.se, cityguide.se, sunet.se,

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Questions, feedback, corrections, news, critics, links and suggestions are welcome !!
mail me:

  kambodschajoe@hotmail.com

Excuse my English, thanks!

English is not my native language. If you have found this site helpful, I would appreciate any grammatical suggestions you might have.
 

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