“The weather decides” could almost
be the motto of Greenland. Visitors drawn to this North Atlantic island to see
its powder blue glaciers, iceberg-clogged fjords, and breathtakingly stark
landscapes quickly learn to respect the elements, and they are sometimes
rewarded for it.
اضافة اعلان
One cold December day, I was waiting for a
delayed flight in Kangerlussuaq, a former US military base just above the
Arctic Circle, when a friendly Air Greenland pilot named Stale asked if I would
like to join him on a drive to the harbor to “pick up some musk ox heads”. The offer
seemed very Greenlandic, so how could I refuse?
By early afternoon, it was already getting
dark. We hopped into a pickup and headed down a long, icy road. At the water’s edge,
Stale picked up a musk ox skull — they are kept as trophies, and the horns can
be valuable for carving and toolmaking. Then we drove up a snow-covered
mountain. The full moon illuminated the fjord below. Next to it, the town
looked like a lunar base: a small pocket of human activity nestled in a
seemingly infinite void.
“Right now most of our money comes from fisheries. We need some other income possibilities, and tourism is one of the key potentials for future growth in Greenland.”
I had arrived in Kangerlussuaq earlier that
day aboard Air Greenland’s first brand-new jet, an A330neo fresh from the
Airbus factory in Toulouse, France. The airport in Kangerlussuaq is one of few
in Greenland with runways long enough to accommodate large jets. From there,
travelers must switch to smaller turboprops to continue onward, including to
the capital, Nuuk — where I was eventually headed — or Ilulissat, a town whose
icy fjord is a UNESCO World Heritage site. When the Airbus jet, also carrying
the prime minister of Greenland, landed, hundreds of people waving
red-and-white Greenlandic flags greeted us.
The new jet is part of a plan to invigorate
the island’s tourism industry. Greenland, which is part of Denmark but has
autonomy over most domestic affairs, is investing hundreds of millions of
dollars in transportation, building new runways and terminals in Nuuk and
Ilulissat. If all goes according to the government’s plan, large jets could
bring international visitors directly to these towns by 2024.
The 35-year-old prime minister, Múte B.
Egede, who supports eventual independence from Denmark, sees tourism as a way
to build economic self-sufficiency. The government has banned all oil
exploration and has been cautious about expanding mining despite the potential
for profits: It blocked the development of one rare-earth mining project over
fears about uranium contamination.
The town of Ilulisat in Greenland.
“We need to have more growth,” Egede told
me before the flight departed. “Right now most of our money comes from
fisheries. We need some other income possibilities, and tourism is one of the
key potentials for future growth in Greenland.”
Tourists are rare, for nowGreenland, the world’s largest island, is
roughly three times the size of Texas but has only about 57,000 residents. In
the first three quarters of 2022, it attracted just under 55,000 visitors,
according to Visit Greenland, the national tourism authority, and nearly 37,000
of them came from Denmark. Only 2,430 Americans visited Greenland in that
period.
A sudden surge of tourists could strain Greenland’s limited infrastructure and challenge what makes the island special. Visitors come to experience its remoteness.
Direct flights from the US could mean a big
influx.
Air Greenland CEO Jacob Nitter Sorensen
told me last year that the airline has North America in its sights, with New
York as a top destination. That would put Nuuk just a four-hour hop away from
the US East Coast, meaning Americans would no longer need to backtrack from
Copenhagen. (Nearly all flights to Greenland currently pass through the Danish
capital.)
But a sudden surge of tourists could strain
Greenland’s limited infrastructure and challenge what makes the island special.
Visitors come to experience its remoteness. Fly down the west coast and you
will pass countless fjords and glaciers crowded only with birds and reindeer.
You are more likely to spot humpback whales, narwhals, polar bears, and musk
oxen than to see a tour bus. Some locals worry about becoming the next Iceland,
which has struggled to cope with hordes of tourists and rising prices as that
island’s popularity has exploded in the past decade.
For now, those fears seem distant. Tourists
are rare, and the weather still makes the rules. When I finally got to Nuuk, I
had planned to go on a snowshoe trek in the mountains outside town and take a
boat trip to see the fjords. I had also booked a special dinner of traditional
Greenlandic cuisine — a menu that might have included food like reindeer,
whale, musk ox, and Arctic herbs and berries. But a lack of snow put a stop to
the trek, high winds canceled the boat trip, and the dinner was called off
because there were not enough other customers.
But at least one plan remained intact. I
had booked a night in a “glass igloo” at the edge of town and was looking
forward to the private hot tub and sauna — with views of the nearby bay and
mountains — on its deck.
When I arrived in a taxi from the airport a
few hours late, I found the place shut. It was frigid, the paths slick and
treacherous. As the taxi sped away, I tried to call the hostel. Nobody
answered.
Then, just as I was gearing up for the long
walk up the icy hill to find a main street and hopefully another place to stay,
a car pulled up, and Gerth Poulsen, a co-owner of the igloo, got out. Poulsen
showed me around, turned on the hot tub, handed me a pack of peanuts and a
Greenlandic beer, and drove back into the night, leaving me alone in my glass
igloo.
“There’s a great pressure to have more destinations ready when it comes to hotels, restaurants and experiences… And it must be based on our values, to ensure a sustainable development.”
With panoramic views of the rugged
landscape, it felt a bit like camping, but with a very effective heating
system.
Striking a difficult balanceThe island’s tourist infrastructure remains
somewhat limited, but officials hope to change that by the time the new runways
and terminals open next year.
“There’s a great pressure to have more
destinations ready when it comes to hotels, restaurants and experiences,” said
Anne Nivíka Grodem, CEO of Visit Greenland. “And it must be based on our
values, to ensure a sustainable development.”
With jet travel a major contributor to
global warming, a destination famous for its ice and snow will have to strike a
difficult balance.
Greenland is still a place where “the
weather decides” can be a liberating mantra: Once we accept that we are
powerless to do anything about the weather, we can give up control. And when we
do, anything can happen.
For me, a delayed flight turned into an
expedition onto a mountain. And then in Nuuk, with my packed schedule of
outings wiped clean, I was free to wander, ducking into a pub that seemed
straight out of old Denmark, dining on a plate of surprisingly affordable giant
snow crab legs, and visiting the national museum to learn how Indigenous
Greenlanders thrived in the harsh conditions 1,000 years ago, long before the
kind of heat I had in that igloo.
It was not exactly the Greenlandic
experience I had planned, but it was the kind of adventure that endures.
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