Why You Should Visit Greenland in 2020

There are multiple reasons why you should visit Greenland and this article is a brief yet extensive look at the culture and the environment that Greenland has to offer. Continue on to find out more:
Vast bands of stunning, unfenced wilderness give adventurers exceptional autonomy to wander at will, whether on foot, by ski or by dogsled. With almost no roads, transportation is expensive, but indulging on helicopter and boat rides is worth every penny. These whisk you over actually superb mountainscapes and glaciers or through some of the planet’s most remarkable fjords. Greenland also offers world-beating but charmingly uncommercialized opportunities for sea kayaking, rock climbing and salmon fishing.

The world’s biggest non-continental island has the world’s sparsest population. Nonetheless, scattered mainly along Greenland’s west coast are dozens of photogenic little villages of colourfully painted wooden cottages, plus a few small towns as well as the capital, Nuuk Town (Godthåb). In the south there’s an appealing sprinkling of emerald-lawned sheep farms.

Culturally, the unique blend of Inuit and Danish blood has produced a Greenlandic society all of its own. This sometimes-discordant mix of ancient and modern combines hunting and dogsledding with Carlsberg and kaffemiks. Sensitive visitors with a passionate but unaggressive interest in local ideas will find a fascinatingly rich culture beneath the thick facade of Greenlandic taciturnity.

With an ever-improving network of tourist offices, hotels and hostels, Greenland is no longer the sole reserve of plutocratic cruise-ship passengers. However, you travel, it’s wise to schedule a wide safety margin for unpredictable weather. Leave ample time in each destination to unwind, soak up the midnight sun, witness a glacier calving or to be dazzled by the magic of the aurora borealis.

Culture in Greenland:

Today’s culture in Greenland is a fascinating combination of old and new. Only 30 years after the 1982 debut of the territory’s first television station, Greenland is a place where cell phones outnumber people and where nearly 93 percent of its population has regular internet access. Despite these modern conveniences, locals still use traditional hunting knives, called ulo, to cut freshly caught meat and travel by dogsled or sea kayaks called qajaq.

Despite centuries of isolation from the outside world, most of Greenland’s people are friendly and welcoming to visitors, especially those who come to their traditional Kaffemik coffee gatherings. Drum dances and tupilak sculptures carved from reindeer antlers, narwhal or walrus teeth have remained important art forms. Crafts workshops where local artisans work and sell their creations are found in virtually all communities.

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