An Arctic evening with 40 huskies, stories around the fire, and the aurora
Thirty minutes from Alta city centre, the Arctic wilderness opens up. You're heading to Gargia Lodge, a historic mountain lodge perched at the edge of Finnmarksvidda, where dogs are barking, the fire is lit, and the sky above might just put on a show.
First, you meet the huskies. All 40 of them. These are proper Arctic dogs, loud, bouncy, and completely impossible not to love. Your guide will walk you through the world of dog sledding: how teams are built, how mushers read their dogs, and what life actually looks like when you live and work alongside these animals. There's plenty of time to get up close, say hello, and grab a few photos.
Once you've spent time with the dogs, everyone gathers inside the gamme, a traditional Sámi-style hut, where the real warmth begins. Dinner is a hearty Arctic stew, the kind of food that's kept travellers going across Finnmark for centuries. As you eat, your guide shares stories from the old postal routes that once connected Alta to the inland communities — routes that, from the 1700s onwards, kept northern Europe in touch with the rest of the world, through deep winter and some of the harshest landscapes imaginable.
When dinner's done, you head back outside. The lodge sits far from any light pollution, and if the Northern Lights decide to appear, you'll have a front-row seat — green and purple ribbons shifting quietly across the Arctic sky.
No two evenings here are exactly the same. That's sort of the point.
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