
Dyrskar is a high-mountain pass on the border of Telemark and Vestland, known for its unexpectedly volcanic landscape and eerie quiet that feels transported from Iceland. The terrain is dark, jagged, and windswept—more like Iceland than southern Norway—with basalt-like rock formations, scree fields, and a stark, treeless environment shaped by relentless weather.
Dyrskar is a high-mountain pass on the border of Telemark and Vestland, known for its unexpectedly volcanic landscape and eerie quiet that feels transported from Iceland. The terrain is dark, jagged, and windswept—more like Iceland than southern Norway—with basalt-like rock formations, scree fields, and a stark, treeless environment shaped by relentless weather. The pass sits at about 1,200 meters elevation, creating an alpine environment where summer is brief and winter conditions persist most of the year. Cutting through this dramatic valley is the old stone postal road from the mid-1800s, an engineering marvel where workers hand-built walls, laid stone slabs, and carved passages to create a reliable route for mail delivery and trade between eastern and western Norway.
Parts of the road remain remarkably intact, with precisely fitted stones and sturdy walls that have survived 150+ years of harsh mountain weather. Walking sections of this historic route connects you tangibly to the era when crossing mountains was serious undertaking requiring days of travel and considerable hardship. The area remains almost untouched by modern development, offering a rare stretch where history and geology merge dramatically. Dramatic cliffs rise on both sides of the pass, old road tunnels (some still passable, others collapsed) pierce through rock barriers, and wide views extend over barren rock plains that change color with the light—golden at sunrise, steely gray under clouds, warm at sunset.
The silence is profound, broken only by wind and occasional bird calls. Access is via the modern Rv11 highway which parallels the old road, with opportunities to park and explore on foot. Summer (July-September) offers the only reliable ice-free conditions. The area is popular with Norwegian history enthusiasts and geology students but remains unknown to most international visitors. Bring warm layers as weather can be severe even in summer.
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GPS-koordinater
59.8235, 7.2015