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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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Kvaløya, Norway: Tromsø’s Backyard and an Underrated Wild Island

Kvaløya sits twenty minutes from Tromsø by car, connected by a bridge most people cross on their way somewhere else. Most treat it as a northern lights parking spot in winter, or a stepping stone to Senja or Sommarøy. We visited several times, and eventually stayed a couple of nights. And it turned out to be one of the most extraordinary places we've been in Northern Norway — wild, nearly empty, and completely underrated.

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Renting a Car in Tromsø: Everything You Need to Know

Tromsø, Norway, works perfectly well without a car for a lot of visitors. The city is walkable, the buses are functional, and most of the big tour operators will pick you up from your hotel. If you're spending a few nights chasing the northern lights on guided tours and doing daytime activities in the city, you can get by just fine on foot and public transport.

But if you want to actually explore the region — drive out to fjords on your own schedule, stop where you want, visit Senja (unless you take a day trip), push further toward the Lofoten Islands or the North Cape — a rental car changes the entire trip. Northern Norway is one of the great road trip destinations in the world. A car doesn't just add convenience; it opens up a completely different way of travelling, and absolute freedom.

This guide covers everything you need to know about renting a car in Tromsø, from picking it up at the airport to driving on snow-covered roads in the dark.

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Northern Lights in Tromsø: Best Time, Best Spots & Is It Really a Good Aurora Destination

Tromsø has become almost synonymous with the northern lights. It sits at 69.6°N, deep inside the auroral oval, with fjords and mountains in every direction and more tour operators than anywhere else in Northern Norway. Every winter, tens of thousands of people fly in with one mission (or shall I say, obsession). Some get lucky on their first night. Others spend a week chasing gaps in the cloud cover. Most land somewhere in between.

We've been to Tromsø more than once — summer and winter — and the honest answer to "is Tromsø good for northern lights?" is: yes, with some caveats you should know before booking anything. This guide to the northern lights in Tromsø tells you when to come, where to go when the sky clears, and how to maximize the nights you have.

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Mefjord Brygge Hotel & Cabins: a Dreamy Fishing Settlement on Senja's Wild Northwest Coast

Mefjordvær doesn't announce itself. There's no big sign, no tourist infrastructure, no car park full of coaches.

It's a fishing village of about 150 people on the northwest coast of Senja, gathered quietly around a small harbor with the fjord in front and peaks dramatically rising behind. Actually, it’s technically a settlement belonging to Senjahopen.

And right at the water's edge, where the old brygge once stood, is Mefjord Brygge — a resort that has grown up organically around the village.

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Where to Stay in Tromsø: Best Areas, Hotels, Cabins & Apartments (We Stayed There)

Tromsø isn't one place to stay — it's five, and the one you pick changes the trip. A central hotel on Tromsøya means walking to everything, but a cabin on Kvaløya means darker skies and a completely different pace. Tromsdalen puts you next to the Arctic Cathedral with a quieter feel than the city. Håkøya Island offers a level of seclusion that's hard to find that close to an airport. And further out — Sommarøy, Malangen, Lyngen — it’s a whole different universe.

This guide covers all of them, with our personal picks at every price point. For aurora-specific recommendations, see our dedicated best hotels in Tromsø for the northern lights guide.

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Senja Moments Tranøya: a Private Island Guesthouse Unlike Anything Else in Norway

Tranøya is barely a kilometre across. It sits in a quiet bay just off the southern coast of Senja, reachable only by boat, and has been home to Vikings, vicars, and a Copenhagen socialite who followed a young theologian to the Arctic.

Today it's run by two sisters under the name Senja Moments, and it’s one of the most quietly remarkable places to stay in Northern Norway.

Wenche came to pick us up from the shore in her motorboat on a moody, rainy day, which made the whole place even more atmospheric.

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Yttersia Base & Nordisk Bris on Senja: an Adventure Lodge and Restaurant Worth Knowing

Senja has no shortage of dramatic places to sleep, some on par with what you could find in the Lofoten.

But finding a place that puts you right where you want to be — with good food a few steps away, the island's most iconic hikes within reach, and a host who actually grew up here — that's a different thing.

Yttersia Base in Skaland (with adjacent restaurant Nordisk Bris) is that place. We took time to explore the area, appreciated the good night’s rest and delicious meal after hiking, and left with a list of reasons to come back.

There’s passion behind the hotel and restaurant, and this is exactly the type of place we enjoy and happily recommend.

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Things to See and Do in Tromsø: The Only Guide You Need

We came to Tromsø for the first time in winter 2009. Since then, the city has changed quiiite a bit. It’s now a true Arctic capital, with a true capital offering, which is surprising at this latitude (thanks, Gulf Stream!). However, most visitors go on a northern lights tour, take the cable car, buy a couple of souvenirs and leave without really exploring Tromsø and its majestic surroundings. This guide of things to see in Tromsø is for the other kind of trip.

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Senja Day Trip from Tromsø: the Unique Norway Tour Available Year-Round

Norway's second largest island sits two hours from Tromsø and holds scenery that makes Lofoten look like it has competition. And trust us, the bar is high. Senja's western coast is where the Arctic Ocean meets near-vertical mountain faces, where fishing villages cling to inlets the road barely reaches, and where the beaches look photoshopped even when you're standing on them. The problem — if it is one — is that driving it yourself means watching the road instead of the view. Senja's scenic route is narrow, winding, and entirely worth your full attention on the landscape side of the windscreen. We took Unique Norway's small-group day tour with local guide Henrik, and what follows is what that's like.

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Villa Havblikk, Tromsø: the One Independent Hotel Worth Knowing About

Tromsø's hotel scene is dominated almost entirely by chains. Scandic, Radisson, Clarion — if you've looked at where to stay in the city, you've scrolled through a lot of familiar names. Villa Havblikk is different. The owner found a 1917 Norwegian wooden villa in poor condition, bought it, and rebuilt it from the ground up — modern comforts throughout, but vintage decor and furniture that give a lot of character to the place. It sits directly across the Tromsø bridge from the city center in Tromsdalen, near the Arctic Cathedral and the cable car, with fjord views and a bar that locals enjoy. We spent time here and came away with a clear opinion on who it's right for.

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Northern Lights in Lofoten: When to go, Where to see Them & What to Actually Expect

There is a version of the Lofoten northern lights experience that looks like the photos — green curtains filling the sky above a red rorbuer, the aurora reflected in a still fjord, the mountains black against a luminous horizon. That version is real. We've seen it several times. What the photos don't show is the three nights of solid cloud cover that preceded it, the midnight drive to a different beach because the sky looked slightly less terrible to the west, and the moment it cleared just enough, just long enough.

Lofoten is one of the best places in Europe to see the northern lights. It’s also one of the cloudiest. Knowing both things before you go is key if you have high aurora hopes.

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Things to Do in Lofoten: Tours, Villages & Arctic Experiences

Most people come to Lofoten for the scenery and leave surprised by how much there is to actually do in it. Hiking gets most of the attention — and we've written a full hiking guide in Lofoten if that's your priority — but the activities here go well beyond trails. Whale watching in the Arctic dark. Kayaking under the midnight sun. Sea eagles dropping from altitude to snatch fish from the surface beside your boat. A fishing village frozen somewhere between 1890 and now. The Northern Lights over the harbor.

This is everything worth doing in Lofoten beyond the hikes, with honest notes on what each experience is actually like and when to go for it.

So, put on your hiking shoes and follow us on our favorite trails!

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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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Best Time to Visit Lapland (Finland, Sweden & Norway)

Lapland is not one place.

It stretches across Finland, Sweden, Norway and Russia, and each side behaves differently. Different snow patterns. Different temperatures. Different landscapes.

If you’re asking:

  • Will there be snow in Lapland in December?

  • Is Lapland warmer in Norway than Finland?

  • When is snow guaranteed?

  • Is November too early?

  • Is April too late?

You’re asking the right questions and will find an answer in this guide!

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Best Time to Visit Lofoten (Winter, Summer & Northern Lights Explained)

Lofoten is never just “nice.” It’s dramatic in winter, cinematic in summer, moody in autumn, and quietly magical in spring.
But the experience changes completely depending on when you go.
Are you chasing northern lights? Midnight sun hikes? Empty roads? Snow-covered rorbuer?
Here’s exactly what to expect month by month — so you can choose the Lofoten season that matches your reason for going.

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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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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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