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Where in Chicago are you from?

Originally from Back of The Yards, grew up mostly in the West Lawn area and have also lived in Gage Park, Little Village, and Marquette Park. Still live on the southwest side but have explored almost all Chicago neighborhoods - love the diversity of my city.Don’t want to sound rude but it’s a pet peeve of mine - please don’t claim you’re from Chicago if you live in Oak Lawn, Oak Park, Schaumburg, Tinley Park, Orland Park, Highland Park, Oak Brook. I hate it when I ask where in Chicago someone is from and they say they’re from a suburb…. that’s not Chicago bro!When you put up with struggles of living in the city like taking the CTA, being stuck in inner-city rush hour traffic, random hood shenangins, constant city tax/political rants, and random construction detours, that’s when you can claim you’re from Chicago.

What is the countryside in Norway like, and what is it like to live in it?

(A2A) Thanks for asking, Ingrid. I’m more than happy to answer, as many foreigners seem to think that entire Norway is like Oslo, the capital.[1] However, Norway is a very diverse country.Among city people in Norway, especially in Oslo, there are many myths about the Norwegian countryside, some alive and kicking in other A2As to this question. In the following, I therefore encourage the reader to follow the links below, even if you don’t speak Norwegian, as many links contain pictures. They will give you a chance to see for yourself what the Norwegian countryside is really like.One stubborn myth is that there is depopulation all over the country. Well, true enough, there used to be. But rural Norway is changing.I’m a city boy. I have lived in Oslo my entire adult life after my dear late mum remarried, but my home and my heart is Trondheim, [2] Norway’s 3rd largest city (pop. 200 000), smack in the middle of the indeed elongated Norwegian country, which would stretch all the way from the Canadian border to the Florida panhandle if you moved Norway across the Atlantic Ocean.However, I have also worked for six months as a teacher in Nordland fylke, [3] living in a small municipality without even a village center. In addition, I have seen almost the entire country as a touring new wave musician in the 1980s, playing many tiny villages. I have in fact performed live in 18 of Norway’s 19 fylke (provinces), which are soon to become 11 new regions.statisticsAs of January 1st 2017, 4 283 184 Norwegians (81,5%) live in cities, towns and villages. 960 461 lived in sparsely populated areas.[4]The population of the densely populated areas increased by 55 335 people in 2016, while 8 115 fewer people lived in remote areas come 2017. The discrepancy is due to immigration and population growth.However, the population of the four largest cities of Norway increased only by 25 00 in 2016, which tells us that many Norwegians have moved to the new regional centers.THE REGIONAL CENTERS OF NORWAYCountryside in Norway used to mean isolated, single farms or a cluster of farms and houses. Maybe a truckstop, a gas station, a hotel or a grocery store here and there along the highway. But today it could just as well mean living in or close to a regional center or rural town of a few thousand people.To be given status as a by (town) in Norway, the kommune (municipality) in which it is located, needs to have at least 5 000 inhabitants. However, the town proper can have just a couple of thousand inhabitants, and there are at present 104 towns in Norway, 23 of them with less than 3 000 inhabitants, 4 with less than 1 000.The establishment of regional centers has been a conscious and bi-partisan policy by the Norwegian parliament. The intention has been twofold: to prevent depopulation of the countryside by making the countryside more attactive to live in, and to limit the growth of the major cities, where there for quite some time has been a housing crisis and soaring housing prices, which in the long run is a threat to the Norwegian economy, something several foreign or multinational institutions and organisations repeatedly have warned Norway about. [5]Although there are still regions being depopulated, the overall picture is that the population is not only stabilizing in many regions, there is even a slight population growth in quite a few municipalities. [6]There are small, bustling country towns all over the place. The conscious policy of regionalization is starting to take effect.BREKSTAD, A TOWN IN TRØNDELAG, CENTRAL NORWAY[7]A new Norwegian countryside is rising, for instance in the town of Brekstad (pop: 2 000) in the small kommune (73,18 km2/18 000 ac) of Ørland (pop.: 5 200)[8] on the Fosen peninsula with its 11 kommune and 24 000 inhabitants. [9] Population growth in Ørland 2016–2017 was 1,6%, and since the millennium, there are 16,6% more brekstadings in Brekstad.shopping in BrekstadIn Brekstad, in the new LIBRA shopping center, which predecessor was built in 1978,[10] the shops may not have all the models of your favourite shoe brand, but they do stock Loop, Birkenstock, Adidas and Nike, and in one of the two local sport shops you will get Puma as well. There is Timberland, FILA, GANT, Lee, and Tiger of Sweden to wear. [11] (Didn’t find any of my favourite jeans brands, though. Bummer!)Brekstad spouts two jewelry shops, one of them also an optician, and four supermarkets, plus one Asian grocery store. The large Norwegian chain Elkjop offers kitchen appliances, smartphones, games, computers, audio, TVs, radios and all other electronix. In LIBRA and elsewhere, there is e.g. a florist, a gardening shop, a toy shop, a pharmacy, several gift shops, a book store, a hair salon, a paint shop, a furniture shop, a health food store, a second hand store, car salesmen, a bakery, and the Norwegian government’s wine and liquer monopoly Vinmonopolet has a branch in Brekstad - of course! [12] And yes, you can indeed get your hot espresso or caffe latte in the town center.Not bad for a town with just 2 000 inhabitants, eh?Besides, these days, you have the internet, so if you desperately need that Luis Vitton handbag or a Stone Island jacket, it’s just a click away.Brekstad also has a lawyer, an advertising agency, a print shop, a real estate agent, a hiring agency, a consulting firm, a debt collection firm, a photographer, banks, an art gallery, an accounting firm, as well as several hotels, restaurants, a bar and a pub. And maybe best of all, there is great food, fresh from the surrounding farms. If you don’t mind a short drive, you can visit the farm shop of the Solvang farm, where they raise turkeys and sell homemade jams, pastries, fishburgers freshly made from local fish, as well as their own turkey products and other delicatessen.[13] [14]Farm shops is a new feature of Norwegian farming, a most welcome enterprise for an agricultural sector in decline for decades. 28 000 farms have closed down since 1999, and the 45 000 people working in agriculture are encouraged by the authorities to be innovative. 5% of Norway’s farms have gone organic, while in the early 1990s there were just a handful. [15] Although most farms in Norway are small, the average farm being 235 km2 (58 acres), the entire sector is highly mechaniced and efficient. [16] There are also many large producers. Norway is e.g. self-suffient with tomatoes. In the Rogaland region, one rural producer alone supplies the Norwegian market with 5–10 tons of greenhouse tomatoes every week.[17]But back to Brekstad, where there are three medical and two dental clinics, including ER for both services as well as some specialist physicians and nurses, even a private company ambulance. There are churches, and there is a NAV (Welfare and Employment) office, post office, the sheriff’s department, a fire department, a Child Welfare Services office, a public psychiatric unit (pilot) and most other Norwegian public services.Some services may be located other places on Fosen, rather than Brekstad, but living without a car in Ørland…? You are kidding me, right? But, for that matter, Fosen also has a comprehensive bus service with several routes. However, buses run when there is traffic, and no more than six or seven times a day, some just once, or on weekdays only. [18] [19]YOUR LOCAL NEWS SOURCENorway is a country of local newspapers, both online and in print, [20] and they are being read by 1M people in every part of Norway. Fosen is of course no exception. Fosna-Folket is twice a week distributed in +7 300 copies, and until 2017, “Folket” held its ground against the internet, but these days the Thursday edtion is no more. [21] [22]NO JOBS, NO COUNTRYSIDENot all jobs are available in the countryside. You may not be able to secure yourself a job locally. So what do you do?Once upon a time, white-collar workers started working at 9 am and blue-collar workers begun at 7 pm. Shops in Norway opened at 10 am and closed at 5 pm. However, working hours have become more flexible.working from home. If you don’t service others and have a computer at home, there’s no need for a regular office, at least not every single day. Your employer may let you work from home or stay home parts of your working week, or accept that you arrive 11 am and work until 18 pm. Or maybe you are self-employed, serving mainly customers in e.g. the capital? Then you can easily live in Brekstad.commuting. Many on the Fosen peninsula commute to Trondheim. The speedy commuter ferry will take them there, including the drive to the ferry terminal, in maybe as little as one hour. [23] In the Oslo region, thousands of people work in Oslo, but take the train to and fro work, as trains no longer take forever or stop at each and every small village. If you live in northeastern Grorud Valley, but work in Skøyen on Oslo’s westside, you may even spend more time getting to work than if you live in Brekstad, working in Trondheim. Or maybe you want your kids to grow up in Brekstad, but now that they have become teenagers, you don’t see all that much of them anyway, so becoming an ukependler (weekly communter), spending only weekends at home in Brekstad, makes sense? I mean, you can talk to them and your spouse on social media or on your smartphone whenever you or they please, right?However, most jobs in the countryside will have to be located in the countryside, and not just on farms or in the fishing industry. But we have already seen that regional centers create jobs, as brekstadingene and other fosninger no longer need to travel to Trondheim to satisfy their basic needs, but are served locally. Clinics need employees, so do kindergartens and schools, and the municipal administration and other public sector institutions need workers in a city which is growing. [24] More people means houses have to be built, and with increased traffic, roads have to be maintained and plow trucks must clear them in winter, so eight people are employed in the Norwegian Road Authority, div. Brekstad.Ørland is also home to an important base of the Norwegian Air Force and the base of Norway’s new F-35s, while the older F–16s have been as far as Kyrgyzstan, fighting terrorists there. The new F-35s will be operative in 2019, and some 650 military and civilian personel work at the Ørland base, as well as 200–300 conscripts.[25]But most of all, the countryside needs jobs, as in productive labour. Mascot Høie in Brekstad produces 15 000 pillows and duvets daily, as well as linen, while Grøntvedt Pelagic is the world’s largest producer of barrel-marinated herring. If you have eaten pickled herring on a hotel somewhere on the globe, it may well have originated in Brekstad, since Grøntvedt exports 80% of their 250 000 yearly barrels of herring as far as Japan, plus mackerel and other pelagic species.And of course there are farms in Ørland. Look at the picture below. Brekstad is a tiny cluster of buildings and houses, surrounded by fertile farmland as far as the eye can see. 8% of the population in Ørland is employed in agriculture.This is the new Norwegian countryside.THE MARVELS OF FAMILY LIFE IN BREKSTAD AND ØRLANDIf you are a family person, Brekstad and Ørland is a great place to live.Ørland has five kindergartens and full municipal coverage with two public and three private kindergartens: Marihøna (Ladybug) Music and Outdoor Kindergarten, [26] The Teaching Workshop - Nature and Farm Kindergarten, [27] and Sunnyflower Waldorf Kindergarten. [28]There are two primary and one secondary school in Ørland, but your older teenagers will have to take the school bus to get to Fosen High School in neighbouring Bjugn kommune. [29]Now, these days, many children spend too much time in front of their computers, but in Brekstad you have a far better chance of succeeding in kicking your spawn out of the house. Here, they can roam about on foot or on their bikes, go exploring or fishing or climbing or whatever, in a very safe environment with no dealers or street gangs on the corner.The football teams of Ørland Ballklubb [30] play at Ørland Stadium, and who knows, maybe your kid one day will follow in the footsteps of brekstading Jo Tessem, who went from Ørland BK to become a professional footballer, playing for Southampton FC in England at the height of his career. [31] ØBK also offers handball in the new Ørland Savings Bank Arena [32] with its three handball courts. If ballplay isn’t attractive for your picky off-spring, they can go swimming in the newly renovated public pool [33] or join a different sports club. If you are prepared to drive them to a neighbouring municipality, there are a plethora of other sports available for them on the Fosen peninsula. [34]When you’ve had enough havoc and noise around the house, to finally get some peace and quiet, you can send them to the movies in the brand new and very stylish Community House (Kulturhus). [35]Every kommune in Norway has one these days, it seems.[36]And if your kids get too preoccupied with fishing, sports and bicycle roaming, you can send them to the Ørland Community Library in Brekstad, [37] where both the childrens’ section and the youth section offers not only hundreds of books, but also music albums, movies, audio books, comics and maybe a game of chess? Or your spawn can borrow some books or other media and take them home, all for free.In October, there will be music, dance and theatre with and for 10–18 year olds in Skrekkspillene (Horror Games), and 300 children are following classes at Kulturskolen (Culture School).[38]What more could you possibly want for your kids? Disneyworld?!WHAT TO DO IN BREKSTAD AND ØRLANDAnd what about yourself? What can you do to pass the time in Ørland?It has been said that there is one organisation per capita in Norway. That is of course an exaggeration, but on the Fosen peninsula there are over 250 sports clubs, community organisations, religious and political organisations, motor clubs, naturalist associations, music associations, i.e. roughly some kind of community organisation per 100 inhabitants. There is a scuba club, an accordeon club, boating clubs, neighbourhood associations, and there are sports clubs which offers e.g. Tae Kwon Do and karate, equestrianism, basket, rugby, cycling, skiing, kayaking, sailing, archery, motor sports and swimming. [39] You can join a bridge or a darts club, and if birdwatching is your favourite pastime, Ørland spouts one of the six Norwegian Wetland Centers (Våtmarksenteret), as Ørland municipality is restoring wetlands and marshes. [40][41]Two activities have a long-standing tradition in the Norwegian countryside, and they are maintaining their popularity: Fishing and hunting. There are three Fosen branches of the Norwegian Association of Hunters and Anglers (NJFF), [42]one of Norway’s largest organisations with some 120 000 members of a population of 5M and with no less than 600 NJFF branches all over Norway, an NJFF rate of 1.5 per municipality, as there are 422 Norwegian kommuner.Fosen is renowned for its fishing opportunities, not only sea fishing for cod, pollock, lythe, wolffish, ling, haddock, flounder, whiting, dogfish, sea trout and mackerel, but there are also a great number of lakes and rivers on Fosen with Arctic char, trout and salmon. There are seven small boat marinas in Ørland, and many brekstadings own their own vessel.However, if one activity should be named the pastime of the nation of Fosen, I suspect it would be hunting. Not many foreigners know that Norway is indeed a country of guns. Norway is in fact no. 11 on the world ranking of private gun ownership, with close to 1,4M guns.[43]Most Norwegian private weapons are hunting rifles and shotguns, and the legal quota in Ørland for 2018 is 122 deer and 99 moose (elk). There is also rich duck, goose and small game hunting, which why there are no less than 18 local gun clubs on Fosen.Fosen is also a great place for trekking and hiking, and in Snillfjord, northeast of Ørland, there is even a stretch of rare boreal rainforest. [44]The Community House also features guest performances, and the coming autumn, Brekstad will be visited by comedians and a magician, and when Jarle Bernhoft, nominated for a Grammy in the US in 2015, comes to town, there will no doubt be a full house. [45]GOING TO THE REGIONAL CAPITALA few decades ago, the rural population of Trøndelag [46]had to go to Trondheim to buy, order or seek out much of what they needed of goods and services. Typically, there would be no dentist, optician, medical specialist or lawyer for miles in the countryside, and the only local events would be the bygdefest (“barn dance”), infamous for moonshine calamities, at the old community houses, usually built pre-WW2 and with terrible acoustics.But these days, the town of Brekstad serves the entire Fosen peninsula, the population’s basic needs well catered to. And there are enough customers on Fosen to run a profitable shop, workers available if you want to start a business, and a sufficent number of clients for a public facility or office to make spending of taxpayer money acceptable. Indeed, Ørland, this tiny municipality bordering the Atlantic Ocean which used to be marred by depopulation, even has a 9 hole golf course![47]Never mind the vinyl shop and the sushi bar. You can visit them when you once a month take a trip to Trondheim, where you may also go see a match at the Lerkendal Arena, home of Rosenborg FC, the no. 1 football (soccer) club in Norway, which at least 90% of the inhabitants of Fosen are rooting for with great enthusiasm, especially when RBK plays other top teams in one of the European cups. [48] Trondheim is just a 1–2 hour drive away, plus a catamaran ride across the Trondheim Fiord; no need to bring your car, you leave it at the parking lot by the ferry terminal. [49][50] Or, you could go to Kristiansund,[51] the capital of Nordmøre, [52] enjoying a light meal and a beer or coffee during the 3 1/2 hour ride,[53] picking up passengers on the islands of Hitra and Smøla on the way, hoping that the final leg to Kristiansund will be a smooth ride, as you may be exposed to the wrath of the open Atlantic Ocean if the weather is rough.Ørland-Oslo by airThere are 49 airports certified for commercial traffic in Norway, and Ørland Flyplass (OLA) is one of the 31 minor Norwegian airports, thanks to the Ørland Airforce Base, which is open for commercial traffic as well. A daily service operated by Danish Air Transport will in one hour take you to the Gardermoen National Airport in Oslo, just another boarding from the rest of the world. [54]NORWEGIAN REGIONAL INFRASTRUCTUREIn order to make the new regional structure work, proper communications are indeed needed. Western and northern Norway is ferryland, and 20M cars are annually transported between the terminals of the 121 Norwegian local ferry routes. In a few decades, most will be running of hydropower or hybrid energy, not diesel, so charging stations are being built for ferries, as well as for the estimated 1,5M electrical cars which will be trafficking Norway in 2030.The politicians let Norwegian transport infrastructure decay and detoriate up until around 2010, and some roads and railroads are in an abysmal state. Several roads are quite literally dangerous, as rockslides and gigant falling rocks come tumbling down with regular intervals. even on heavily trafficked highways. [55] Train punctuality has improved the last five years, but still delays are common, much to the chagrin of commuters and travellers who may miss the last ferry home. [56] The Norwegian National Railroad Adminstration (JV)[57] has been the subject of massive criticisms for its lack of foresight and planning.[58] Unfortunately, government top brass are rarely held accountable in Norway. The envelope usually stops by the entrance, where the press officer will say, “Yes. We do have some challenges, but…”The infrastucture of the Norwegian land-based transport sector is in need of investments of no less than 2,6T NOK (USD 320B) 2018–2050, according to a report from 2015. [59] But the mountainous task of upgrading Norwegian roads and railroads is at least finally being adressed, even if the lag is so significant that it will take decades before the entire Norwegian infrastructure is elevated to an acceptable level.On the good side: Norway has +99% broadband coverage, and 75% of all households has 8 Mbit, while 55% has 25 Mbit speed. 99% of Norwegians have 4G, and +50% of the Norwegian land area has coverage.[60] However, the telecommunications sector is private and competition is fierce, while most road & transport is public, and the Norwegian government bureaucracy is infamous for building over budget, IT scandals[61] and endless, successive series of committee deliberations, reports and assessments. Extensive public hearings may take forever, involving a multitude of hearing instances. They call it “democracy the Norwegian way”. If the telecom networks had been public, we’d probably all still be on 3G.OUTSIDE BREKSTAD AND BEYONDThe old Norwegian countryside is still around. When I was teaching up north, I lived in a kommune which now has a population of 2 000, and no regional center. Where I lived, there were just two grocery stores, a school, and 800 inhabitants, most of them employed in farming, fisheries or public sector. Many locals were weekend commuters. Job creation simply didn’t exist. In 25 of the of the 32 municipalities in Nordland with less than 5 000 inhabitants, the population declined from 2016 to 2017. Of the 21 kommunes with less than 2 000 inhabitants, 13 saw a decline, 4 as much as +3%.That many chose and choose to leave the old countryside, is understandable. With almost no possibility of leading some kind of social life in the modern sense, many will become bored or feel that life passes them by.Whether the new Norwegian regionalism will be a success in the end, remains to be seen. In addition to Brekstad, there are five small villages and three inhabited islands in Ørland, places that typically are being depopulated elsewhere in Norway. There are of course people who thrive in an environment like that and wouldn’t trade it for the world. But only a combination of stubborness and the ability to make a living in such remote areas will decide whether these communities will survive. Tourism, however, is expanding, as many city folks are seeking peace and quiet, and also a sense of rural authenticiy, staying e.g. at a lighthouse or an old boat house converted into a bed & breakfast or a rental, being taken out to sea in a fishing boat, returning perhaps with a 10 pound cod; a local chef may even prepare it personally for you some places. [62] [63] [64][65]THE FUTUREØrland municipality will do its utmost to help people move to Ørland or remain there. Every citizen counts. These days, most municipalities in Norway have a Chief Business Commissioner (næringssjef), whose job is to attract businesses and investors to the municipality. If a company should need a plot or a property, it is very likely they will aquire it. Some municipalities even offer lots for free. If a company needs a lateral road or a pier, electricity or water supply in order to run their business, the municipality will do their best to get funds from the government, [66] or they may even take up a loan themselves in a local bank. Ørland will also help any newcomers with housing and maybe give surety if a family should feel they need a 4WD on snowy winter roads.What the future will bring? Who can tell?But Brekstad isn’t special, it’s typical. This is what the new Norwegian countryside, or at least parts of it, looks like. Not exactly urban, but still.THE URBANIST’S BRIEF GUIDE TO THE NORWEGIAN COUNTRYSIDENow, of course, after a while, you will most likely meet no strangers in the pub. If you are a dedicated collector of vinyl, you will have to go to Trondheim. I can’t find any sushi bar in Brekstad, just an Asian take-away, although I woldn’t be surprised if a sushi bar pops up come 2019, but I don’t exactly expect the chef to be born in Kyoto, Japan. If you are an urban person, Brekstad is not where you will want to live.If you are single, your choice of a spouse will be limited, but you always have match.com, and just like in the Viking age, the menfolk of Brekstad will travel abroad to find a wife, which is why it is not unusual in places like Brekstad to see quite a few Asian women, who will be more than happy to settle in a nice and friendly country town like Brekstad.So if you recognize yourself in the Tom Waits line…And you wonder how you ever fathomedthat you’d be contentto stay within the city limitsof a small midwestern town…then I strongly advice you against settling in a place like Brekstad. You will most likely get extremely bored, then restless, and soon you will want to move.However, the people who live there, will shake their heads and wonder how you could be such a fool to leave their small community, as they head to their favourite fishing spot, take the kids to the new swimming hall, or look up to see a sparrowhawk soar high above them, as they go about weeding in their very own organic kitchen garden, picking fresh thyme and lovage, thinking-Poor city folks, they don’t know what they’re missing. What’s with the word chilling they don’t understand?Brekstad in Ørland on a sunny summers’s day.Scuba diving in Ørland, anyone?And if you’re lucky, you may get a visit by Vamp from Haugesund in southwestern Norway, one of the flagships of Norwegian country/folk music, here with their massive classic “Liten fuggel” (Small bird) - in nynorsk, [67] of course.Or maybe you prefer the controversial Brekstad TNBM heroes of Slagmaur? [68]Warning: NSFW!For more facts about Norway, check out my Quora blog:NORWAY EXPLAINED:Your guide to Norway and Norwegians by Morten JørgensenFootnotes[1] Morten Jørgensen's answer to What are some subtle cultural aspects of Norwegians that you probably can't learn about via Google?[2] Trondheim - Wikipedia[3] Nordland - Wikipedia[4] 2017-12-19[5] IMF warns Norway over property prices[6] Folketalet ved nyttår var 5 258 000[7] Trøndelag - Wikipedia[8] Ørland - Wikipedia[9] Fosen - Wikipedia[10] Se utviklingen av Libra bilde for bilde fra 1977 [11] Shopping - Ørland[12] Vinmonopolet - Wikipedia[13] Åpningstider[14] Brekstad Sentrum - Ørland[15] Fakta[16] Snart kan du produsere spesialmelk[17] Tomat-resultater i verdensklasse[18] https://www.atb.no/getfile.php/1314924-1528101561/Rutetabeller/Sommer2018/AtB_rute451.pdf[19] https://www.atb.no/getfile.php/1315017-1528101790/Rutetabeller/Sommer2018/AtB_rute490.pdf[20] Landslaget for lokalaviser – Wikipedia[21] Fosna-Folket[22] Fosna-Folket - Wikipedia[23] Trondheim - Brekstad[24] https://www.orland.kommune.no/administrasjon/organisasjonskart/[25] The future has landed[26] Marihøna musikk- og friluftsbarnehage[27] Læringsverkstedet Opphaug natur- og gårdsbarnehage[28] Solblomsten Steinerbarnehage[29] Fosen VGS - fosen.vgs.no[30] Ørland Ballklubb - Fotballgruppa[31] Jo Tessem - Wikipedia[32] Sitter du på et ønske om å støtte byggingen av den nye storstua?[33] Svømmehallen - Ørland kommune[34] Idrettslag og foreninger på Fosen[35] Kino / Ørland Kultursenter[36] Image on mdn.no[37] Ørland folkebibliotek[38] SKREKKSPILLENE PÅ FOSEN[39] https://www.orland.no/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/Sports-%C3%98rland.pdf[40] Rusasetvatnet / Ørland Kultursenter[41] Fuglene flokker til Rusasetvatnet[42] Norwegian Association of Hunters and Anglers - Wikipedia[43] Få har flere våpen enn nordmenn[44] Scandinavian coastal conifer forests - Wikipedia[45] Jarle Bernhoft - Wikipedia[46] Trøndelag - Wikipedia[47] Austrått Golfklubb[48] Rosenborg's Miracle Against Ajax[49] Trondheim - Vanvikan[50] Trondheim - Brekstad[51] Kristiansund - Wikipedia[52] Nordmøre - Wikipedia[53] Trondheim - Brekstad - Kristiansund[54] Ørland Airport - Wikipedia[55] Image on tv2.no[56] Forsinkelser i togtrafikken over hele landet[57] Norwegian National Rail Administration - Wikipedia[58] Riksrevisjonen med skarp kritikk av Jernbaneverket[59] Knusende rapport om Norges tilstand: Forfall på 2600 milliarder[60] Mobildekning – Wikipedia[61] IT-skandale -sverige -danmark -social at DuckDuckGo[62] http://kufly.no/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/IMG_3252ed.jpg[63] Visit Coastal Norway - Tourist information for Hitra, Frøya, Bjugn, Snillfjord, Osen, Åfjord, Roan, Rissa, Leksvik og Fosen - KystNorge[64] Discover Fosen Norway Autumn theme[65] Turistkatalog. Ørland. Oppslagsverk for personer i kontakt med turister. v PDF[66] Innovation Norway - Wikipedia[67] Nynorsk - Wikipedia[68] Slagmaur - Bestemor Sang Djevelord Lyrics | Musixmatch

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