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Ice Hotel

Sweden

November 24, 2016 22:27
Intricate ice-sculptures turn bleak bedrooms into art galleries.

ByDaniel Cobbs, Daniel Cobbs

1 min read

They told me it was cold, but how cold could it possible be? Looking out of the aeroplane's window as we approached Kiruna, Sweden's northernmost airport, the frozen wasteland below appeared to be a degree or two cooler than the freezer aisles in Tesco. So this, I thought, couldn't be much worse. Oh, how wrong I was.

The clue was always going to be the name Ice Hotel, yet these two words wouldn't come close to describing the shock of first experiencing temperatures of -38C as I stepped outside the warmth of the airports tiny arrivals hall.

Yet here, 200km north of the Arctic Circle, where harsh winters last from November until April, the local Sami people have successfully lived with here for over 6,000 years.

Despite the threat of losing a digit, or something more valuable, I donned the movement-constricting Arctic outerwear I had been loaned and boarded the waiting dogsled.