Slektsreisen
The four-day drive north — Oslo to Trondheim and back via the Stjørdal valley parish churches and Kylloplass, taken by the Gråhårsklubben (the Oldsters) while the Ungdommene (the Youngsters) move west through the fjords.
- Day 3 Tue, 28 Jul
Slektsreisen (the family-lineage journey)
Drive Oslo → Trondheim
- Slektsreisen
- Trondheim
- Day 4 Wed, 29 Jul
Stjørdal, Hegra & Kylloplass
The heritage day
- Stjørdal & Hegra
- Kylloplass
- Trondheim
- Day 5 Thu, 30 Jul
Trondheim
The medieval city — Nidaros and Bakklandet
- Trondheim
The Gråhårsklubben (the Oldsters) — Sara, Kirsten, Dave — drive north on Day 3 to the country the Norwegian-side ancestry traces back through. Day 4 is the heritage day out into the Stjørdal valley — the parish churches at Værnes and Hegra and the small clearing-farm at Kylloplass, the literal piece of ground the Kyllo family name comes from.
What this is
Slektsreisen (the family-lineage journey) is the Gråhårsklubben (the Oldsters)’ parallel excursion to Norway in a Nutshell. While the Ungdommene (the Youngsters) move west through the fjords, this side of the trip drives north — about seven hours up the E6 from Oslo to Trondheim and back, with a heritage day out into the Stjørdal valley in between.
The places it touches
Two real places have their own pages:
- Stjørdal & Hegra — the valley east of Trondheim, and the two parish churches, Værnes and Hegra.
- Kylloplass — a small clearing-farm in the same valley.
The day base for this excursion is Trondheim — its own destination — which holds the hotel, the cathedral, and the medieval old quarter.
The arc
Day 3 (Tue July 28) — Drive Oslo → Trondheim, about seven hours up the E6. Check in at Scandic Nidelven on the river.
Day 4 (Wed July 29) — Out into the Stjørdal valley to the parish churches at Værnes and Hegra and on to the Kylloplass small holding. The day is unhurried — most of it is spent walking ground rather than seeing sights.
Day 5 (Thu July 30) — Trondheim itself: Nidaros Cathedral, Bakklandet’s wooden old quarter, the bend of the Nidelva river.
Day 6 (Fri July 31) — Drive south to Lillehammer, where the group reunites with the Ungdommene (the Youngsters).
Background
Trøndelag is the historical heart of medieval Norway — the country’s first capital city (Trondheim, founded 997) sits here, and the Nidaros pilgrimage walks across northern Europe converged here for five centuries before the Reformation. The wider region remains rural farming country: small parishes, plasser — clearings cut from forest and worked across generations — and a slow, deliberate rhythm.
The drive itself follows the E6, Norway’s main north-south highway. The road climbs gradually out of the Oslo plain, crosses the Dovrefjell mountain plateau (the same divide Peer Gynt climbs in Ibsen’s play), and drops into the Trøndelag lowlands around Trondheim Airport at Værnes. It is one of the great Norwegian road journeys and has been a trade route — for pilgrims, soldiers, and cattle — for the better part of a millennium.
Places along this excursion
Each of these has its own page with the detail of what happens there.
- Trøndelag
Stjørdal & Hegra
Two parish churches in the Stjørdal valley — Værnes, one of the oldest stone buildings in Norway, and the wooden church at Hegra — both still in use by the local parish.
- Trøndelag
Kylloplass
A small forest-cleared farm-place in the Stjørdal valley upvalley from Hegra — a *plass* in the Norwegian sense, abandoned since 1890.
Learn more
Journals from Slektsreisen
No posts yet. During the trip, journal entries and photos from Slektsreisen will appear here.