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            Welcome to Been there. Your tips on the places you know - that you love,
            live in or have just visited - are what make this guide.
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                <title>Spotting the midnight sun in Tromso</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/31936</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[Between mid-May and the end of July, you can take the cable car to the top of the mountain for stunning views all over Tromso and the midnight sun. There is even a cafe up there!]]></description>
                
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                <title>Romantic Northern Lights Hurtigruten Cruise Short-Break</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/28650</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[A short-break to Tromso in Northern Norway to see the northern lights is just the most romantic thing I have ever done. <br>Never mind you are wrapped up in layers of thermal wear, the light show in the skies are just a thousand times more romantic than a sunset will ever be.<br>On the Hurtigruten cruise you also get to go to the North Cape, which is really cool to say that you have been. There is amazing food onboard, a really relaxed and non-cruise like feeling, and the hot tub on the top deck is an absolute winner - even in minus five degrees!<br>All in all it's just a really cool and romantic getaway.]]></description>
                
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                <title>Verdensteatret Cinema</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/26082</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[Waiting for a ship to depart Tromso for a Norwegian cruise can be both tedious and expensive on a gloomy December evening. I was delighted to stumble across the Verdensteatret (World Theatre). Seating 349, this listed building, one of Scandinavia’s oldest cinemas, dates from 1915. Tucked down a side street, it’s a friendly little haven of welcome, with a popular café and astonishingly beautiful cinema, gilded and chandeliered, interior walls brightly painted with full-length folklore murals. I sat in splendid comfort for the price of an entrance ticket and watched Romeo and Juliet, live opera from the New York Met. Finally allowed to embark at midnight, my frozen fellow voyagers were envious when I told them of my lucky find.<br><br>This is the ultimate cinema, with independent, art house and film festival showings, to savour after live music (or vinyl) in the trendy café.]]></description>
                
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                <title>Cross-country Skiing under the Northern Lights</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/25356</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[The best way to avoid disappointment is to combine hunting for the Northern Lights with something else that's fun and different. Tromsø, Norway, is a great place to do just that. I went dog sledding which was so much fun I nearly forgot why I was there in the first place. With seven Huskies dragging you into the quiet wilderness on a sledge, the Northern Lights is an added bonus if it shows up, but even without it you would not go home feeling left out. My best night however was the cheaper option of renting cross country skis from the Intersport shop in town and heading for the free, open 24hrs, floodlit slopes on the island, just a short walk from the town centre! The calming feeling of sliding along on the skis, taking in the fresh air, makes the northern lights even more spectacular. Best of all, you wont have to 'share the experience'with anyone else, which often is the case on organised tours. And the downhills provide an added thrill! <br>The city itself is known in Norway for being one of the most hospitable – with a buzzing nightlife.]]></description>
                
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                <title>Inset</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/21796</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[Inset is a tiny hamlet in northern Norway, well inside the Arctic Circle, and when I say tiny, the central area has four buildings, and three of them belong to Regina and Bjorn who own and run the Husky Farm.<br><br>Go in December and as you touch down in Bardufoss, 60km or so from Inset, you will notice as you leave the plane that you are walking not on tarmac but on a solid sheet of gritted ice. The first thing you feel is the cold, as suddenly the reason so many brightly coloured Puffa jackets peppered the plane becomes clear. Ask a local what the temperature is, "15 C" they will reply - to have to say "minus" every time would just be a waste of breath.<br><br>When you turn off the two track road that leads all the way back to Oslo, you leave street lights and civilization behind you, and enter the astonishing black of the arctic night. One hour later and you pull into the Husky Farm, a warming glow permeating through the little windows in the wooden buildings whose roofs are covered with grass; a chorus is there to greet you as the 70 or so husky dogs howl to mark your arrival. <br><br>Bjorn and Regina have an amazing log cabin which you can rent by the week. It is entirely made of wood and has a wood burning stove which must be permanently lit as the flue travels through the bedroom and kitchen making sure the heat is distributed around the whole building. It is a picture of comforting isolation, nestled in a valley with hills becoming mountains on either side, snow drifts come up to the windows. There is no sound other than the dogs and the wind, and no light bleeds into the sky, so undisturbed views of the aurora borealis are possible. Indeed on the second night of our visit I opened the front door and saw beams of light coming from behind the mountains and flooding the sky with dancing hues of blue and green. The lights performed for me for 20 minutes and then disappeared, quite suddenly and quite mysteriously. <br><br>The few hours of twilight that the sun offers at these latitudes must be used to the full. If you book for the Husky Farm Holiday you will get to experience leading your own team of dogs as you sledge over the frozen lakes into the abyss of the arctic landscape. The sky is one hundred colours at the same time, the light is ethereal, and the seclusion is absolute. You come to trust and rely on your dogs as only they hold the key to unlocking some of the secrets of the scenery and beauty of this most remote of locations.<br><br>If you are looking for glorious isolation, and some private time with nature, look no further.]]></description>
                
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