The Maelstrom
– "Keep an Eye On the Current"
The Lofoten Headland’s next-door neighbour is the Maelstrom – Moskstraumen –
renowned as one of the world’s strongest tidal currents in open waters. It
flows between the island of Moskenesøya in the north, and some islets just
north of the uninhabited island of Mosken in the south. The strait is about
4-5 kilometres across and 40-60 metres deep, and is considerably shallower
than the surrounding sea. The tide fills up the Vestfjord twice a day, and
the difference in height between high and low tides can be up to 4 metres.
Midway between high and low tide, the current changes direction, and this is
when the whirlpools begin to appear, with speeds of up to 6 knots.
Nothing else in Lofoten has been so prolifically described – and exaggerated
upon – in so many languages. In 1539, Olaus Magnus’ "Carta Marina" was
published – complete with an illustration of a terrifying Maelstrom. In
1555, his work on the Nordic people’s history came out in Rome. The
Maelstrom is here described as an ocean vortex that runs up and down the sea
every day, devouring great ships and spewing them up again! In 1591 the
district bailiff wrote, " ... When the Maelstrom is at its peak, then you
can see the sky and the sun through the waves and breakers, because they
roll in as high as mountains." Similar impassioned descriptions of the
Maelstrom can also be found in later accounts. The Norwegian clergyman and
poet Petter Dass, the American author Edgar Allan Poe and the French author
Jules Verne, are all in the same league. These authors describe the furious
force of the Maelstrom, and Jules Verne also describes it as the world’s
most dangerous stretch of sea. They write of a current that howls, that
rumbles like a buffalo herd on the prairie, that drags ships under, smashing
them to smithereens against the sea bed. They describe great whales
bellowing as they submit to the Maelstrom’s vortices, while on land, the
houses shudder at their foundations! The inhabitants of the outer coast
villages of Hell and Refsvika lived nearest to the Maelstrom. They were
annoyed at these exaggerations. They themselves had first and foremost
treated the forces of the Maelstrom with respect – adapting their work and
travels to it in a natural manner. Yet even so, it took its toll among the
inhabitants.
Its ferocity was indeed a powerful experience. From the land, it was
exciting and entertaining to watch, and the locals gladly climbed a fair way
up the mountainsides to get a better view of it. Today they say, "The
Maelstrom, ah yes, that was our television when we were kids." Despite all
the delirious descriptions of "the Great Maelstrom," the people of the outer
coast regarded it as a gold mine – full of shoals of shiny fish.
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