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Kalsoy – (Photo)

Kalsoy (Danish: Kalsø) is an island in the north-east of the Faroe Islands of Denmark between Eysturoy and Kunoy. The name means man island; by contrast with the parallel island to the east, Kunoy, the name of which means woman island.

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Kalsoy (Danish: Kalsø) is an island in the north-east of the Faroe Islands of Denmark between Eysturoy and Kunoy. The name means man island; by contrast with the parallel island to the east, Kunoy, the name of which means woman island.

The northernmost part and scenery of Kalsoy was used as stand-in for the Kuril Islands in eastern Russia while filming for the 25th James Bond movie No Time to Die. In the film, which was released in 2021, the villain’s lair is located on the island, for which a harbour and missile silos were added digitally.

Kalsoy, like Svínoy, is a comparatively isolated island, in that no bridge, tunnel, or causeway links to it.

Fun fact:
Kalsoy is well known for it’s part in the James Bond movie ”No Time to Die”
Shooting the movie ”No Time To Die” took place in the Faroe Islands in autumn of 2019. The scenes in the movie were filmed in the village of Trøllanes for two days and the crew filmed at the nearby stunning Kallur promontory and surroundings for three days.

Geography
The western coast has steep cliffs for the full length of the island, whereas valleys on the eastern slopes protect the four tiny settlements, Húsar, Mikladalur, Syðradalur, and Trøllanes, whose combined populations total less than 80.
They are connected by a partly surfaced road which passes through four dark tunnels.
The island’s thin shape and road tunnels give it the nickname “the recorder” (Faroese: blokkfloytan).
A lighthouse (Kallur Lighthouse) is located at Kallur, the northern tip of Kalsoy.

Legends
Kalsoy has many legends, the best known of which is the legend of the Selkie or Seal-Woman of Mikladalur.

A young farmer from the town of Mikladalur on Kalsoy Island went to the beach to watch the selkies dance.
He hid the skin of a beautiful selkie maid, so she could not go back to sea, and forced her to marry him.
He kept her skin in a chest and the key with him both day and night.

One day when out fishing, he discovered that he had forgotten to bring his key.
When he returned home, the selkie wife had escaped back to sea, leaving their children behind. Later, when the farmer was out on a hunt, he killed both her selkie husband and two selkie sons, and she promised to take revenge upon the men of Mikladalur.

Some shall be drowned, some shall fall from cliffs and slopes, and this shall continue, until so many men have been lost that they will be able to link arms around the whole island of Kalsoy; occasional deaths still occur in this way on the island.

This revenge has always been taken seriously, not only in Kalsoy, but also in the Faroe Islands generally.
The descendants of the Seal-Woman are still known in the country by certain characteristics, especially their short fingers.

CAMERA TYPE

Hasselblad Camera 1” CMOS

FILES INCLUDED

JPEG & DNG RAW

PHOTO DIMENSIONS

5464 x 3070

ISO

100

FOCAL LENGTH

10 MM

F-STOP

5.6

MAX APERTURE

2.971

EXPOSURE TIME

1/320

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