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Penguin Trampoline: The blog

With Penguin Trampoline, adventures soar to new heights!

Are you ready to bounce into a world of awe-inspiring destinations, where the thrill of exploration meets the grace of a penguin's waddle?

From the icy wonderlands of polar regions to the sun-kissed Mediterranean beaches, our travel blog is your ultimate ticket to discovering hidden gems, unlocking travel tips, and embracing the sheer joy of discovering new horizons.

We're not just about sightseeing; we're about experiencing the heartbeat, culture and gastronomy of each destination, bouncing into moments that leave an indelible mark on our souls.

Join our community of dreamers and explorers as we leap from continent to continent, propelled by curiosity and an insatiable wa/onderlust.

So, buckle up, grab your passport, and prepare to spring into the exhilarating world of Penguin Trampoline!

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Lofoten in Winter: Is it Worth it, and What to Expect

If you’ve been researching the Lofoten Islands, you’ve probably noticed a pattern: most content focuses on summer. Hiking. Midnight sun. Dry trails and long days.

So a fair question comes up fast:

Is Lofoten actually worth visiting in winter?

The honest answer is ABSOLUTELY yes — if you understand what kind of trip it becomes. Winter in Lofoten is quieter, moodier, and less predictable. You won’t hike high ridges. You will spend more time watching weather, light, and sea. And trust us, you’ll want to, because this is without a doubt one of the most spectacular places on earth. It also means lower prices and a lot less people, which is always nice — in our humble opinion.

If that sounds appealing, winter can be one of the most rewarding times to go.

Time off is limited. Flights and hotels aren’t cheap. And winter travel in Lapland adds friction whether you like it or not. So this guide is about experiencing Lapland well in one week — without rushing, without backtracking, and without pretending the Arctic is smaller or easier than it is.

If you’ve got more time, perfect. Stay longer.
If you’ve got seven days, this is how to make them count.

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One Lapland Trip, Three Countries: How to Combine Sweden, Finland & Norway

We’re unapologetically in favor of slow travel. Fewer places, more time. Staying somewhere long enough to notice how the light shifts, how silence settles in, how weather quietly dictates the pace. In the Arctic, less is often more: winding down in a sauna after a day outside, waiting for the northern lights, watching the snow fall, enjoying a “fika” by the fire.

But we also know reality.

Time off is limited. Flights and hotels aren’t cheap. And winter travel in Lapland adds friction whether you like it or not. So this guide is about experiencing Lapland well in one week — without rushing, without backtracking, and without pretending the Arctic is smaller or easier than it is.

If you’ve got more time, perfect. Stay longer.
If you’ve got seven days, this is how to make them count.

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Northern Lights Trips by Travel Style: Where to Go Based on How You Travel

The 2025-2026 northern lights season has been exceptional so far, and one thing is clear: people aren’t just asking where to see the aurora anymore. They’re asking which kind of trip actually fits them.

Short stay or long trip?
Car or no car?
Tour or no tour?
Quiet or social?
First time or return visit?

This guide helps you choose the right northern lights destination based on your travel style, so your trip works in real life — not just on paper.

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How People are Actually Traveling in 2026 (and Why Quieter Destinations are Winning)

Travel in 2026 isn’t about ticking off famous places anymore. It’s about how you travel, when you go, and what kind of experience you want once you’re there.

After years of over-tourism, rising prices, and destinations that feel more like theme parks than places, travelers are making calmer, more intentional choices. And the data backs it up, as per Booking.com stats: quieter destinations, off-season travel, and colder regions are driving real bookings — not just inspiration clicks.

That makes us very happy at Penguin Trampoline, as we always encourage responsible travelling, and we are constantly looking for the perfect balance between travellers' and locals’ interests.

Here’s what’s actually shaping travel in 2026, and how to use these shifts to choose better destinations.

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Northern lights Without a Car: How to See the Aurora the Easy Way

Seeing the northern lights is one of those travel dreams that feels almost mythic — until you start planning it and suddenly everything involves icy roads, late-night driving, weather stress, and rental car disclaimers written in very small print.

Here’s the reassuring truth: you absolutely can see the northern lights without a car. In many cases, it’s not just easier — it’s smarter. We’ve done it plenty of times — Luleå, Alta, Kiruna, Rovaniemi, etc. — as we usually don’t rent a car in winter.

This guide is for travelers who want the aurora without white-knuckle winter driving, missed turnoffs in the dark, or constant road-condition checks. We’ll show you how it works, where it works best, and how to choose accommodation and tours that do the heavy lifting for you.

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Trips from Alta: Where You Can Actually Go (Winter & Year-round)

Alta doesn’t behave like a “gateway destination.” It doesn’t funnel you toward a checklist. It doesn’t shout must-see.

And that’s precisely why it’s one of the best bases for a road trip in Arctic Norway — although we could stay forever in Alta and not get bored!

But for many people, once they’ve booked a few nights in Alta, the same question always follows:

Where can you realistically go from Alta — especially in winter?

One of our readers actually sent us this question (thank you, Priscilla!)

This guide covers the best trips from Alta, year-round, with clear explanations about winter road conditions, safety, driving times, and realistic expectations. And if you prefer not to drive, we also included a couple of bus alternatives!

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Do You Need a Car in Alta, Norway? Driving vs Tours, Honestly Explained

Alta looks small on the map. That’s deceptive.

Yes, it’s compact. Yes, the airport is close. But once you start planning northern lights nights, winter activities, or trips beyond town, the car vs tours question becomes very real — and the answer isn’t the same for everyone.

We’ve done Alta with and without a car, in different seasons. Here’s the honest breakdown.

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Outdoor Adventures in Alta, Norway — Fjord Paths, Forest Trails & Quiet Arctic Nature

We love Alta because it doesn’t try to impress you. It just hands you a quiet fjord, a forest trail, a sky that changes every five minutes, and lets everything unfold naturally.
On our last trip, we realised Alta’s wild side is exactly what keeps pulling us back—fewer people, bigger spaces, and that steady feeling that you’re finally breathing again.

This guide is all about outdoor adventures that don’t overlap with the general “what to do” list—real places, real trails, and seasonal nature experiences you can’t get in the bigger, more touristy Arctic cities.

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10 Magical Alternatives to Rovaniemi (Without the Crowds)

Rovaniemi is lovely.
It’s iconic.
It’s Santa’s “official” hometown.
It’s also… completely flooded from November to early January.

Families, buses, long lines, sold-out activities, €450 reindeer rides, and prices that make reindeer reconsider their life choices.

If you're dreaming of Christmas magic without the stampede, Scandinavia is full of places that feel just as magical — sometimes more.

We’ve spent winters all over the Arctic — Kiruna, Abisko, Luleå, Alta, Tromsø, Svalbard, and Finnish Lapland (outside Rovaniemi) — and there are SO many places where the Christmas vibes are strong, the Northern Lights are bright, and the prices are (slightly) less terrifying.

And if your kids are begging for Santa, we’ve included a bonus a bit further away… but definitely off the beaten path!

Here are the best Rovaniemi alternatives, and what makes each special.

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Best Hotels with Sauna in Alta — Warm Up After Your Northern Lights Chase

Alta is the kind of Arctic destination that sneaks up on you. One minute you’re staring at a map thinking, Why go that far north?
Then you get here, step into the silence, watch a curtain of green auroras fall over the fjord, and suddenly everything makes sense.

But here’s the thing: Alta in winter is cold. Really cold.
And the magic hits even harder when you can end the night in a steamy sauna, thawing your eyelashes while the snow quietly piles up outside. If you’re brave, you can even go for a dip in the frozen water or roll in the snow. That’s our favorite thing to do, and we can’t imagine a Nordic stay without it!

So we made your life easy — here are the best hotels with sauna in Alta, all perfect bases for northern lights hunters, winter road trippers, and anyone who believes warmth is half the adventure.

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Northern Lights in Norway — A Complete Guide to Clear Skies, Quiet Nights & the Best Aurora Spots

Norway is where the Northern Lights feel bigger, sharper, and somehow more alive. Yes, you can see aurora all across Lapland — Sweden, Finland — but, while we love every corner of Sápmi, Norway has something the others don’t: those insane fjords and steep mountains that turn every aurora into a full-blown cinematic event.

When the sky clears (and it does, especially in Alta and Finnmark), the lights don’t just appear overhead — they spill across ridges, dance along black-water fjords, and frame themselves perfectly behind peak after peak. It’s why so many aurora photographers swear by Norway. You don’t just see the lights here. You get foregrounds that make your jaw drop.

We’ve watched the aurora across the whole Arctic — Kiruna, Abisko, Iceland’s coast, Greenland’s wild ice — and nowhere gives you scenery like Norway on a clear night. This guide breaks down exactly where to go, when to go, how the weather works, and how to make the most of the landscape that makes Norway the superstar of aurora chasers.

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How to See the Northern Lights in Alta — The Quiet Capital of the Aurora

Alta has this calm magic to it.
No huge cruise ships.
No chaos.
No crowds fighting for a patch of darkness.

Just a dry valley, open sky, and some of the most reliable aurora weather in northern Norway.

We’ve chased the Northern Lights all over the Arctic — Svalbard, Lofoten, Swedish Lapland, Greenland, Finnish Lapland, Iceland, Churchill — but Alta remains where the sky has surprised us the most. Not once. Repeatedly.

This is the full guide to seeing the aurora in Alta: where to go, when to go, how to chase it, and how to give yourself the best possible odds.

If you want the science behind the aurora, photography settings, how colors work, or where else in the world to go, you’ll find everything neatly gathered in our Northern Lights Hub.

Now let’s get you under that green sky.

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Things to Do in Kiruna in Winter

Kiruna in winter feels like stepping into its own Arctic dimension — blue-hour days that stretch forever, forests that glow with frost, and nights where the sky tears open in green. We’ve returned here many times, and every time it reminds us why Swedish Lapland hits differently: it’s calm, quiet, and somehow deeply personal.

If you’re heading north, here are the winter experiences that make Kiruna unforgettable.

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Alta, Norway in Winter — Quiet Magic Above the Arctic Circle

Alta in winter feels like the Arctic at its most honest — long blue hours, slow mornings, and skies that come alive at night.
Alta isn’t just “another Northern Lights town” — we actually compare Alta vs. Tromsø here— It’s calmer, smaller, and beautifully authentic.

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Best Hotels in Svalbard, Norway — Where to Stay at the Edge of the World

You don’t come to Svalbard for fancy hotels — you come for silence, polar light, and the shock of realizing humans aren’t the main characters here.

But when the wind howls outside and you’re sipping hot chocolate under a reindeer pelt? Comfort matters.

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Best Hotels & Rorbuer in the Lofoten Islands, Norway

The Lofoten Islands aren’t just a place to sleep — they’re a place to dream. Where jagged peaks rise straight from the sea, where the air smells of salt and pine, and where every window could frame a postcard.

Staying here is part of the adventure: quiet villages, fishermen’s cabins perched over turquoise water, and saunas that steam in the Arctic air. Whether you’re coming for hiking, the Northern Lights, or the feeling of being at the edge of the world, choosing the right stay matters, as it’s part of the experience.

We’ve tested a few ourselves — from rustic rorbuer to modern apartments — and prepared a list of the dreamiest ones.

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Alta, Norway: What to Do in the Arctic’s Most Underrated Town

When we got to Alta, locals kept asking us: “Why Alta”?

Indeed, many visitors skip Alta on their way to the North Cape, or just stop in Tromsø. And you know what? They’re missing out. Big time.

Alta might not be plastered all over Instagram, but that’s the beauty of it. And, as you know, our kind of destinations at Penguin Trampoline!

Interestingly for us, Arctic addicts, Alta is considered the northernmost city in the world with a population surpassing 10,000.

So, keep reading to find out why visit Alta, Norway!

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Svalbard Tours & Expeditions (Season by Season)

Svalbard sits halfway between mainland Norway and the North Pole — a scatter of icy islands where glaciers meet sea, foxes pad across snowfields, and polar bears outnumber people.

We first arrived by the small prop plane from Tromsø, stepping into that eerie polar stillness that feels less like travel and more like landing on another planet.

This isn’t just a place you visit. It’s a place you feel, and it will redefine your idea of Arctic wilderness.

Here’s how to plan your own Svalbard expedition or tour, season by season — with honest notes from our own time on the islands.

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Best Hotels in Tromsø for the Northern Lights

If you’re chasing the Northern Lights in Norway, Tromsø is usually the first name you hear — and for good reason.
The city sits right under the auroral oval, surrounded by mountains, fjords, and more cozy hotels than anywhere else above the Arctic Circle.

You don’t have to trek into the wild to see the aurora — sometimes it dances right above your balcony. That being said, if the aurora is on the weaker side, your best shot is far from the city lights. And you’ll find awesome options in the surroundings!

Here are the best Tromsø hotels for Northern Lights lovers, whether you want views, comfort, or a cabin-in-the-snow vibe.

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Northern Lights Tours in Alta, Norway — When, Where & How to See the Aurora

Alta, Norway may not get the same attention as Tromsø, but locals quietly call it the City of the Northern Lights — and for good reason.

Every winter, Alta becomes one of the most reliable places on Earth to join a Northern Lights tour and actually see the aurora dance.

We’ve actually seen some of our best auroras there, and it’s the mix of quiet roads, wide skies, and cozy Arctic charm that makes it special… with less tourists, as we love it!

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