it is different on each time of the year. at the summer it is light and sun day and night. at the spring it is dark from about 10-11 at the evening to 5-6 at the night. at the autumm there is dark from 7-8 at the morning to 9-10 at the evening. at the winter it is dark from 8-10 at the morning to 3-4 at the afternoon. remember to have in mind that Norway is a long country and there can be small differenses in different parts of Norway. I live in Lofoten and wrote how it is here.
Norway is a very long country; if you were to stick a pin in Oslo then rotate Norway about the pin the far north of Norway would reach to Rome (Italy).
Almost one third of Norway's length lies within the Arctic Circle. The northern towns like Kirkenes and Hammerfest have weeks of continuous darkness either side of the winter solstice.
No.
It isn't.
It's border with Norway would be close to that length.
As long as I'm living and my huge dick covers the sun , it'll always be dark in antartica.
Dark Star - 1974 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G Australia:MA (cable TV rating) Iceland:12 Netherlands:16 Norway:11 UK:PG USA:G West Germany:6 (f)
Dark Arts in a Long Plastic Hallway - 2009 is rated/received certificates of: Canada:14A
The simple answer is that Germany occupied Norway, and your enemy's enemy is your friend. For the long answer, we need to look back to WWI. Norway was neutral and was supplying Germany with canned fish. The British were fed up with this, and presented Norway with an ultimatum; Stop feeding Germany, or we stop supplying you with coal. Norway now had to choose sides, and this sparked a collaboration where a large portion of the Norwegian commercial fleet was put at Britain's disposal. However, Norway still claimed to be neutral. When WWII started, Norway once again declared it's neutrality, but the government had the view that if war became inevitable they had to side with Britain.
Most of Norway isn't
Depends immensely on where you are (Norway is long) and time of year.
In winter, yes.
Obviously. Norway has loads of natural sources of energy, waterfalls and rivers mostly. No, Norwegians do not live in the utter dark with candles.
The Northern Lights occur year round but are only visible when nights are dark. In the locations in which they are best seen, Alaska, Canada, Norway and Finland, they are usually seen from September through April when the nights are long and dark.
It is 117km long.
woman 83 years men 78 years
You can use it as long as you live since both (UK and Norway) are part of the EU.
Zero. Norway has an extremely long coastline with the north sea.
save it for the dark times by Norway gone ( great band)
Long and hilly
a long long time ago