If it is legal, then why not? What local people think is their business
Geiranger is a pretty heavy traffic tourist town in the high season; I don’t know if short-term off-season “digital nomads” would be viewed the same way as the caravan/cruise ship crowd, but you’re not likely to be welcomed as a local. That said, I would not expect people to be rude and bet you’d still have a great experience. I’d do it.
Side note: The repeated use of “arctic” is false advertising, as it lies well south of the Arctic Circle (62 degrees vs 66 degrees). For Arctic towns, start at Bodo (more or less) and look north.
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Will you have a valid residency permit as digital nomad?
Stuff like this does not have support among the local population.
The tourism is increasingly disliked and this is viewed as an extension of it.
haha if it’s anything like how foreigners are viewed in the rest of the country, then the answer to your questions are simple: badly and no.
All I know is that this is supported by the minicipality
https://mrfylke.no/nyheiter/europeiske-prosjekt-til-geiranger-skal-lare-a-lokke-digitale-nomadar.24990.aspx
If it is legal, then why not? What local people think is their business
Geiranger is a pretty heavy traffic tourist town in the high season; I don’t know if short-term off-season “digital nomads” would be viewed the same way as the caravan/cruise ship crowd, but you’re not likely to be welcomed as a local. That said, I would not expect people to be rude and bet you’d still have a great experience. I’d do it.
Side note: The repeated use of “arctic” is false advertising, as it lies well south of the Arctic Circle (62 degrees vs 66 degrees). For Arctic towns, start at Bodo (more or less) and look north.
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