Author: e.vagnes@outlook.com

  • So far so good

    So far so good

    A happy sight at Juneau Airport 👍

    We all arrived safe and sound to Juneau and so did all our luggage

    One of Erling’s IKEA bags was torn, but as a precaution the IKEA bags were packed in “double Kamprad” fashion. That is two bags, one outside the other. And the inner bag was undamaged, so no trail of dry sacks from Seattle to Juneau

    Mikko arrived last, one hour after midnight, and we had to leave for the ferry at 0530.

    Mikko had done some research and reported that Juneau was a very good airport to sleep in…, as sleeping in airports go that is.

    And the alternatives were both cumbersome and expensive. So we decided to try the “Finnish” way.

    And we were not alone. Apparently planes arrive and leave Juneau at just about any hour. And tens of people were sleeping on the couches in a “lounge” area. Well ordered and quiet.

    …as sleeping in airports go…

    We all got some decent sleep.

    But if happiness equals “outcome divided by requirements”, then one reason why the Finns consistently score top of the global happiness index could be a quite modest approach to the requirement side and a low comfort threshold…

  • The team

    The team

    The 2025 “Outside the Inside Passage team. From the left Mikko, Karianne and Erling

    Mikko Suominen, is a very experienced and well travelled paddler from Finland.

    For all of you fluent in Finnish you can read more about it in the book “Kajakki kapsäkissä LINK”, “With the kayak in suitcase”. Mikko has paddled along the west coast of Canada and Alaska four times previously

    Erling first met Mikko in Helsinki in May 2018 en route to Russia with Stein Kynø, LINK. Ever since Mikko has spoken often about his dream to paddle here in the Inside Passge again.

    Meanwhile we have paddled together in Norway, Sweden and Finland. So we know the team works well.

    Mikko is also a geologist and an ornithologist (even if not formally qualified)

    He did part of his studies at Erling’s “Alma mater”; the university of Oslo, a few years after Erling.

    As far as Erling can tell from his acquaintances there – no one has any recollection of this young Finnish student.

    Maybe because he spent most of the time skiing on Hardangervidda and paddling along the south coast of Norway.

    In spite of this extensive extracurricular activity the studies went well, and Mikko is now looking after the literal foundations of Helsinki as the city reclaims land and grow out into the Bay of Finland.

    Karianne Fønstelien Vintervoll lives in a paddling neighbourhood close to Blindern in Oslo, midway between Stein Kynø and Erling ca 50m from each and we had kids in the same class at school. So, maybe she didn’t have much option but to take up paddling.

    Together with Stein and Erling and other paddling friends, she has paddled the entire Norwegian coast and large parts of the Swedish and Finnish coast as well.

    When not paddling she is a busy chartered auditor at KPMG, this trip will be the first time she does not bring her job PC along

    Erling VĂĽgnes is a retired geologist/geophysicist/manager having worked 33 years in Equinor.

    He has also paddled extensively, the longest trip being a 2018 attempt to circumnavigate Scandinavia from Oslo to Oslo via the Russian waterways LINK.

    Erling is the trips “blog master” and will try to keep friends and family updated on this blog.

  • Next stop Juneau, Alaska

    Next stop Juneau, Alaska

    A special thank you to Ingvar Kamprad, whose contribution to modern outdoor life cannot be overstated

    Then we are off, if all goes well we will reunite with the IKEA bags in Juneau, Alaska at 0300 CET Sunday, 1700 Saturday local time