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Suðuroy

Suðuroy (literally South Island, Danish: Suderø) is the southernmost of the Faroe Islands. The island covers 163.7 square kilometres (63.2 sq mi). In 2018 the population was 4,601. Suðuroy region (sýsla) comprises this island and Lítla Dímun, the next isle northward in the Faroes, which is uninhabited.

Suðuroy
Suderø
Location within the Faroe Islands
Coordinates: 61°32′N 6°51′W / 61.533°N 6.850°W / 61.533; -6.850Coordinates: 61°32′N 6°51′W / 61.533°N 6.850°W / 61.533; -6.850
StateKingdom of Denmark
Constituent countryFaroe Islands
RegionSuðuroy
Area
 • Total163.7 km2 (63.2 sq mi)
Highest elevation
610 m (2,000 ft)
Population
 (1-2020)
 • Total4,601[1]
Time zoneUTC+0 (GMT)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (EST)
Calling code298

History

One ancient settlement, Víkarbyrgi was abandoned late in the 1990s. Another settlement, Akraberg was abandoned around 1350 because of the Black Death; the people who lived there at that time came from Friesland, and legend has it that people in Hørg (in Sumba) can trace their ancestry back to this settlement, which was situated on the southernmost point of the island.

In the 17th century, Suðuroy was subjected to repeated attacks by North African pirates, who in the Faroe Islands were referred to as Turks when North Africa belonged to the Ottoman Empire. One well known such incident was the Slave raid of Suðuroy .They abducted several women and children.[2] Famine ensued, and many of the island's inhabitants died of starvation. In 1615, the pirate-plagued Hvalba was rescued by two Danish warships in the spring. The pirates, who used Hvalba as a kind of base port, had unfortunately sailed 14 days before the arrival of the Danish squadron.

The village of Sandvík was re-established in the 19th century. Fámara was re-settled in 2010 with the expansion of Vágur beyond its original town borders. Two more settlements were started in the early and mid-20th century: Botni, northwest of Vágur, and Tjaldavík, in a bay southeast of Øravík. Both sites have been abandoned again.

Suðuroy's population has been falling gradually since the 1970s. In 1985, the island had 5,881 inhabitants, but by 2019 the population fell to a record low of 4,591.[3]

Geography

The highest point of Suðuroy is the mountain Gluggarnir (610 metres or 2,001 feet),[4] but the most famous peak is definitely the mountain of Beinisvørð northwest of the village of Sumba. The Beinisvørð and its scenery have been praised by the local poet Poul F. Joensen (1898–1970), as well as other Faroese poets. Suðuroy is the island which has the most islets and skerries. Suðuroy and the islets and skerries near the island number 263, including the island itself.[5]

The inhabited settlements on Suðuroy include, from north to south: Sandvík, Hvalba, Froðba, Tvøroyri, Trongisvágur, Øravík, Fámjin, Hov, Porkeri, Nes, Vágur, Fámara, Akrar, Lopra and Sumba.

Suðuroy is also the only island of the Faroes which has coalmines, one of which is still active. It is located in Hvalba, near the tunnel. Other coalmines were in Rangabotnur in Trongisvágur (on the south side of Trongisvágsfjørður), and in Fámjin. The bays of Øravík, Trongisvágur, Fámjin, Vágur and Hvalba are designated grind bays.[6]

In contrast to the name Suðuroy (South Island, singular), the name Suðuroyggjar (Southern Islands, plural) refers to the Outer Hebrides in Scotland. To refer to the islands south of Skopunarfjørður one can colloquially say (going) "sunnanfjørðs" or formally Suðurøkið.

Important Bird Area

The western side of the island has been identified as an Important Bird Area by BirdLife International because of its significance as a breeding site for seabirds, especially northern fulmars (100,000 pairs), European storm petrels (2500 pairs), European shags (200 pairs), black-legged kittiwakes (39,000 pairs), Atlantic puffins (20,000 pairs), common guillemots (31,900 individuals) and black guillemots (400 pairs).[7]

Transport and infrastructure

MS Smyril operates two to three times daily between Tórshavn and Suðuroy, leaving from the new ferry port of Krambatangi on the south side of the fjord of Trongisvágsfjørður. The journey takes two hours. There are two national bus routes in Suðuroy, route 700 operates between Tvøroyri and Sumba (the southern line) and 701 between Fámjin and Sandvík (the northern line). There is a heliport at Froðba with flights to Tórshavn and Vágar Airport.

A road network runs the entire length of the island, including five road tunnels: the Sandvíkartunnilin (1969), the old and new Hvalbiartunnilin (1965 and 2021), Hovstunnilin (2007) and Sumbiartunnilin (1997). The Fámjinstunnilin will be started with in 2022. The proposed Suðuroyartunnilin would connect the island with Skúvoy and Sandoy, replacing the ferry Smyril.

 
The 3.3 MW Botnur Hydroelectric Power Plant was built in 1921.

The Suðuroy electricity grid depends on the Vágur 13 MW diesel,[8] 6.3 MW wind turbines and the 3.3 MW hydro Botnur power plant. The island is not connected to other islands.[9] A 250 kW solar park was installed at Sumba in 2019,[10] and produces 2 MWh/day at best.[11] Power supply agency SEV calculated that two 900 kW wind turbines could save DKK 6 million per year on diesel,[12] and seven Enercon wind turbines at a combined 6.3 MW were installed at Porkeri Mountains in 2020. The wind turbines reduced the consumption of oil.[11] A 6MW / 7.5MWh grid battery[13] and a syncron compensator is planned to stabilize the grid.[14]

Sights and activities

Cliffs

 
View from Eggjarnar

Vágseiði is a place with 200-metre-high (660 ft) cliffs towards south, but the road is down by the sea, the skerries are called Heltnarnar and a cliff on Vágseiði is called Múlatangi.

Eggjarvegur on the south side of the fjord, Vágsfjørður, leads up to Eggjarnar, 200 m (660 ft) on a vertical cliff with a view towards Beinisvørð in the south and to Vágseiði in the north. On Eggjarnar, visitors can find two concrete bunkers which were British observation points during World War II. There is also an abandoned former Loran-C radar station, as it closed down in the mid-1970s.

South of Eggjarnar is the isthmus of Lopra, Lopranseiði, which is around 50 metres (160 ft) above sea level. An islet called Lopranshólmur is just a few metres from the cliffs of Lopranseiði. The cliff Beinisvørð is south of Lopranseiði, in between are some skerries, where the Dutch ship SS Westerbeek was shipwrecked in 1742. Eighty-four men were on board, three died when the ship ran aground, one fell down while trying to climb the cliff, but eighty men survived. They had to climb up the vertical cliff in order to survive, they found a place on the cliff where they could stand, they climbed from the ship to the cliff by the broken mast.

Fámjin

 
Fámjin is surrounded by some of the highest mountains of Suðuroy. The lake at left is Kirkjuvatn.

Fámjin is one of two villages which are located on the west coast of Suðuroy, Sumba is the other one. All the other villages are located on the east coast. Fámjin has a special reef in the middle of the bay, which close the bay at low tide, except for a sailing channel made by men in order for fishing boats to be able to go fishing. The small fishing harbour is inside this reef. There is a lake just above the village, called Kirkjuvatn, the path starts near the church. Another attraction in Fámjin are the cliffs and gorge west of the village, called Prestgjógv (Priest Gorge). The main attraction of Fámjin however is the original Faroese flag, Merkið, which is hanging inside of the church. It was made in 1919, by some Faroese students who studied in Copenhagen. One of them was Jens Oliver Lisberg from Fámjin. The flag was not recognized as the official flag of the Faroe Islands until World War II, when the Faroes were occupied by the British, and Denmark by Germany, and the islands needed their own flag. Since then, the Merkið has been the official flag of the Faroe Islands. Inside the church of Fámjin is also the Fámjin stone, a Runestone with runic inscriptions.

Hikes

Tvøroyri there is an attractive walk across the mountains to a valley called Hvannhagi. There is a view over the valley and to Lítla Dímun and Stóra Dímun and the sea from above the valley. No roads lead to this valley.

Jóansøka

Tvøroyri and Vágur take turns in hosting an annual civic Midsummer festival called Jóansøka. It can be described as a smaller version of the Ólavsøka held in Tórshavn. It runs in late June, in the last weekend of June, the rowing competition is always on Saturday of the Jóansøka weekend.

Theatres

In Øravíkarlíð near the ferry terminal the island's main cultural venue SALT sits in a former salt silo. It was abandoned in 1980 and after repurposing opened as a theatre in 2017.[15][16]

Sports in Suðuroy

 
Rowing competition at Jóansøka in Vágur in June 2010.

Football in Suðuroy

The oldest sports club in the Faroe Islands, the football club Tvøroyrar Bóltfelag (TB) was founded in Tvøroyri on May 13, 1892, and is thereby the 9th oldest football club in the Danish Kingdom. There were three other football clubs in Suðuroy: Vágs Bóltfelag, (VB), Royn from Hvalba and the football club from Sumba, but VB Vágur and Sumba merged in 2005 to VB/Sumba (a similar merger under the name Sumba/VB had been attempted in the 1995 season but it lasted only this one season). On January 1, 2010 a new football club has been founded in Suðuroy, it is called FC Suðuroy and currently consists of the prior VB/Sumba.

TB Tvøroyri currently (2013) competes in the best Faroese football division; FC Suðuroy plays in the second best division. Both TB Tvøroyri and VB Vágur have won the Faroese National Championship (TB seven times, the last being in 1987, and VB once in the year 2000); but since the success is lacking in recent years, there is a growing debate about merging the four teams into one, (VB and Sumba have, as mentioned above, already joined forces since 2005). Royn Hvalba is playing in 3rd division in 2013.

Swimming in Suðuroy

Suðuroy has recently had good results in international swimming competitions. The two swimming clubs in Suðuroy "Vágs Svimjifelag" and "Tvøroyrar Svimjifelag" joined forces 6 September 2007 and founded Susvim, which is for the whole island. A young man from Vágur has had the best results until now. Pál Joensen won triple gold in the 2008 European Junior Swimming Championships on the short course in the men's 400 M, 800 M and 1500 M Freestyle. Two years later he won silver in the Men's 1500 M Freestyle at the 2010 European Aquatics Championships.[17] Other swimmers from Susvim have also had good results in Faroe Islands and in Denmark and other countries and at the Island Games competitions.

Rowing in Suðuroy

There are two active rowing clubs in Suðuroy, Vágs Kappróðrarfelag from Vágur and Froðbiar Sóknar Róðrarfelag from Tvøroyri and the villages around Trongisvágsfjørður (fjord). There are also rowing clubs in Sumba and in Hvalba. In Sumba they had a boat which was called Broddur, but they have not been active for some years now. In Hvalba they had a boat which was named Snopprikkur after a well-known man from the history of Suðuroy (Suðuroyar Sagnir). Vágs Kappróðrarfelag has these boats: Royndin Fríða, which is a so-called 5-mannafar, Smyril, which is a 6-mannafar, and Toftaregin, which is an 8-mannafar and Vágbingur, which is a 10-mannafar. Froðbiar Sóknar Róðrarfelag has the boats Firvaldur, which is a 5-mannafar (Firvaldur means Butterfly), Firildur and Hulda are also 5-mannafar, Tvørábáturin is a 6-mannafar, Suðringur and another Tvørábáturin are 10-mannafar (there are two boats which are called Tvørábáturin, which means the boat from Tvøroyri).[18]

Gallery

References

  1. ^ Statistical Database
  2. ^ Joensen 1981, pp. 211–245.
  3. ^ "Changes in population by born, dead, migrated, village and month (1985-2020)".
  4. ^ us.fo 2015-07-15 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ US.fo 2013-10-21 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Heimabeiti. "Hvalvágir góðkendar". Heimabeiti (in Faroese). Retrieved 2020-08-20.
  7. ^ BirdLife International. (2012). Important Bird Areas factsheet: Suduroy. Downloaded from http://www.birdlife.org on 2012-02-24.
  8. ^ "Vágsverkið". www.sev.fo (in Faroese). from the original on 14 February 2021.
  9. ^ Mikladal, Poul A. (December 2005). "Sustainable energy in the Faroe Islands - the role of hydropower" (PDF). Faroese Prime Minister's Office. p. 15. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
  10. ^ "Sólorka". www.sev.fo (in Faroese). from the original on 9 February 2021.
  11. ^ a b "40% green energy in the first half-year of 2021". www.sev.fo (in Faroese). 15 July 2021.
  12. ^ . SEV. 2014-10-02. Archived from the original on 2 March 2017. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
  13. ^ "Hitachi Energy 7.5MWh BESS project to help Faroe Islands towards 100% renewables by 2030". Energy Storage News. 16 December 2021.
  14. ^ "Vindmyllulund í Porkerishaganum". www.sev.fo (in Faroese).
  15. ^ "History of SALT".
  16. ^ Fólk á ferð: Strandferðslan 100 ár. Tvøroyri: Strandfaraskip Landsins. 2017.
  17. ^ Swimmingworldmagazine.com 2012-08-19 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Drekin.fo 2011-07-20 at the Wayback Machine

Sources

  • , Faroe Islands Statistics
  • Susvim

Bibliography

  • Joensen, H.D. (1981). Sambandið føroyinga og útlendinga millum. Hugleiðingar um viðurskiftini frá 1273 til 1856 [The relationship between Faroese and foreigners. Reflections on the trade from 1273 to 1856] (in Faroese). Fróðskaparrit.

External links

  • Visitsuduroy.fo, General travel information about Suðuroy
  • , Suðurrás The News Portal of Suðuroy
  • SSL.fo, Time schedule of Smyril the Suðuroy ferry and busses
  • Smyril - The ferry to Suðuroy
  • Painting Courses in Suðuroy
  • Art Gallery Oyggin
  • Ruth Smith Art Museum
  • Photos on Flickr tagged with Suðuroy.

suðuroy, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, require, cleanup, meet, wikipedia, quality, standards, specific, problem, reword, travelog, text. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Reword travelog text as summary style Please help improve this article if you can June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style March 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Danish January 2022 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Danish Wikipedia article at da Suduroy see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated da Suduroy to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Learn how and when to remove this template message Suduroy literally South Island Danish Sudero is the southernmost of the Faroe Islands The island covers 163 7 square kilometres 63 2 sq mi In 2018 the population was 4 601 Suduroy region sysla comprises this island and Litla Dimun the next isle northward in the Faroes which is uninhabited Suduroy SuderoIslandLocation within the Faroe IslandsCoordinates 61 32 N 6 51 W 61 533 N 6 850 W 61 533 6 850 Coordinates 61 32 N 6 51 W 61 533 N 6 850 W 61 533 6 850StateKingdom of DenmarkConstituent countryFaroe IslandsRegionSuduroyArea Total163 7 km2 63 2 sq mi Highest elevation610 m 2 000 ft Population 1 2020 Total4 601 1 Time zoneUTC 0 GMT Summer DST UTC 1 EST Calling code298Contents 1 History 2 Geography 2 1 Important Bird Area 3 Transport and infrastructure 4 Sights and activities 4 1 Cliffs 4 2 Famjin 4 3 Hikes 4 4 Joansoka 4 5 Theatres 5 Sports in Suduroy 5 1 Football in Suduroy 5 2 Swimming in Suduroy 5 3 Rowing in Suduroy 6 Gallery 7 References 8 Sources 9 Bibliography 10 External linksHistory EditOne ancient settlement Vikarbyrgi was abandoned late in the 1990s Another settlement Akraberg was abandoned around 1350 because of the Black Death the people who lived there at that time came from Friesland and legend has it that people in Horg in Sumba can trace their ancestry back to this settlement which was situated on the southernmost point of the island In the 17th century Suduroy was subjected to repeated attacks by North African pirates who in the Faroe Islands were referred to as Turks when North Africa belonged to the Ottoman Empire One well known such incident was the Slave raid of Suduroy They abducted several women and children 2 Famine ensued and many of the island s inhabitants died of starvation In 1615 the pirate plagued Hvalba was rescued by two Danish warships in the spring The pirates who used Hvalba as a kind of base port had unfortunately sailed 14 days before the arrival of the Danish squadron The village of Sandvik was re established in the 19th century Famara was re settled in 2010 with the expansion of Vagur beyond its original town borders Two more settlements were started in the early and mid 20th century Botni northwest of Vagur and Tjaldavik in a bay southeast of Oravik Both sites have been abandoned again Suduroy s population has been falling gradually since the 1970s In 1985 the island had 5 881 inhabitants but by 2019 the population fell to a record low of 4 591 3 Geography EditThe highest point of Suduroy is the mountain Gluggarnir 610 metres or 2 001 feet 4 but the most famous peak is definitely the mountain of Beinisvord northwest of the village of Sumba The Beinisvord and its scenery have been praised by the local poet Poul F Joensen 1898 1970 as well as other Faroese poets Suduroy is the island which has the most islets and skerries Suduroy and the islets and skerries near the island number 263 including the island itself 5 The inhabited settlements on Suduroy include from north to south Sandvik Hvalba Frodba Tvoroyri Trongisvagur Oravik Famjin Hov Porkeri Nes Vagur Famara Akrar Lopra and Sumba Suduroy is also the only island of the Faroes which has coalmines one of which is still active It is located in Hvalba near the tunnel Other coalmines were in Rangabotnur in Trongisvagur on the south side of Trongisvagsfjordur and in Famjin The bays of Oravik Trongisvagur Famjin Vagur and Hvalba are designated grind bays 6 In contrast to the name Suduroy South Island singular the name Suduroyggjar Southern Islands plural refers to the Outer Hebrides in Scotland To refer to the islands south of Skopunarfjordur one can colloquially say going sunnanfjords or formally Sudurokid Important Bird Area Edit The western side of the island has been identified as an Important Bird Area by BirdLife International because of its significance as a breeding site for seabirds especially northern fulmars 100 000 pairs European storm petrels 2500 pairs European shags 200 pairs black legged kittiwakes 39 000 pairs Atlantic puffins 20 000 pairs common guillemots 31 900 individuals and black guillemots 400 pairs 7 Transport and infrastructure EditMS Smyril operates two to three times daily between Torshavn and Suduroy leaving from the new ferry port of Krambatangi on the south side of the fjord of Trongisvagsfjordur The journey takes two hours There are two national bus routes in Suduroy route 700 operates between Tvoroyri and Sumba the southern line and 701 between Famjin and Sandvik the northern line There is a heliport at Frodba with flights to Torshavn and Vagar Airport A road network runs the entire length of the island including five road tunnels the Sandvikartunnilin 1969 the old and new Hvalbiartunnilin 1965 and 2021 Hovstunnilin 2007 and Sumbiartunnilin 1997 The Famjinstunnilin will be started with in 2022 The proposed Suduroyartunnilin would connect the island with Skuvoy and Sandoy replacing the ferry Smyril The 3 3 MW Botnur Hydroelectric Power Plant was built in 1921 The Suduroy electricity grid depends on the Vagur 13 MW diesel 8 6 3 MW wind turbines and the 3 3 MW hydro Botnur power plant The island is not connected to other islands 9 A 250 kW solar park was installed at Sumba in 2019 10 and produces 2 MWh day at best 11 Power supply agency SEV calculated that two 900 kW wind turbines could save DKK 6 million per year on diesel 12 and seven Enercon wind turbines at a combined 6 3 MW were installed at Porkeri Mountains in 2020 The wind turbines reduced the consumption of oil 11 A 6MW 7 5MWh grid battery 13 and a syncron compensator is planned to stabilize the grid 14 Sights and activities EditThis section is written like a travel guide rather than an encyclopedic description of the subject Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style If a travel guide is intended use of Wikivoyage is strongly suggested January 2022 Cliffs Edit View from Eggjarnar Vagseidi is a place with 200 metre high 660 ft cliffs towards south but the road is down by the sea the skerries are called Heltnarnar and a cliff on Vagseidi is called Mulatangi Eggjarvegur on the south side of the fjord Vagsfjordur leads up to Eggjarnar 200 m 660 ft on a vertical cliff with a view towards Beinisvord in the south and to Vagseidi in the north On Eggjarnar visitors can find two concrete bunkers which were British observation points during World War II There is also an abandoned former Loran C radar station as it closed down in the mid 1970s South of Eggjarnar is the isthmus of Lopra Lopranseidi which is around 50 metres 160 ft above sea level An islet called Lopransholmur is just a few metres from the cliffs of Lopranseidi The cliff Beinisvord is south of Lopranseidi in between are some skerries where the Dutch ship SS Westerbeek was shipwrecked in 1742 Eighty four men were on board three died when the ship ran aground one fell down while trying to climb the cliff but eighty men survived They had to climb up the vertical cliff in order to survive they found a place on the cliff where they could stand they climbed from the ship to the cliff by the broken mast Famjin Edit Famjin is surrounded by some of the highest mountains of Suduroy The lake at left is Kirkjuvatn Famjin is one of two villages which are located on the west coast of Suduroy Sumba is the other one All the other villages are located on the east coast Famjin has a special reef in the middle of the bay which close the bay at low tide except for a sailing channel made by men in order for fishing boats to be able to go fishing The small fishing harbour is inside this reef There is a lake just above the village called Kirkjuvatn the path starts near the church Another attraction in Famjin are the cliffs and gorge west of the village called Prestgjogv Priest Gorge The main attraction of Famjin however is the original Faroese flag Merkid which is hanging inside of the church It was made in 1919 by some Faroese students who studied in Copenhagen One of them was Jens Oliver Lisberg from Famjin The flag was not recognized as the official flag of the Faroe Islands until World War II when the Faroes were occupied by the British and Denmark by Germany and the islands needed their own flag Since then the Merkid has been the official flag of the Faroe Islands Inside the church of Famjin is also the Famjin stone a Runestone with runic inscriptions Hikes Edit Tvoroyri there is an attractive walk across the mountains to a valley called Hvannhagi There is a view over the valley and to Litla Dimun and Stora Dimun and the sea from above the valley No roads lead to this valley Joansoka Edit Tvoroyri and Vagur take turns in hosting an annual civic Midsummer festival called Joansoka It can be described as a smaller version of the olavsoka held in Torshavn It runs in late June in the last weekend of June the rowing competition is always on Saturday of the Joansoka weekend Theatres Edit In Oravikarlid near the ferry terminal the island s main cultural venue SALT sits in a former salt silo It was abandoned in 1980 and after repurposing opened as a theatre in 2017 15 16 Sports in Suduroy Edit Pal Joensen Rowing competition at Joansoka in Vagur in June 2010 Football in Suduroy Edit The oldest sports club in the Faroe Islands the football club Tvoroyrar Boltfelag TB was founded in Tvoroyri on May 13 1892 and is thereby the 9th oldest football club in the Danish Kingdom There were three other football clubs in Suduroy Vags Boltfelag VB Royn from Hvalba and the football club from Sumba but VB Vagur and Sumba merged in 2005 to VB Sumba a similar merger under the name Sumba VB had been attempted in the 1995 season but it lasted only this one season On January 1 2010 a new football club has been founded in Suduroy it is called FC Suduroy and currently consists of the prior VB Sumba TB Tvoroyri currently 2013 competes in the best Faroese football division FC Suduroy plays in the second best division Both TB Tvoroyri and VB Vagur have won the Faroese National Championship TB seven times the last being in 1987 and VB once in the year 2000 but since the success is lacking in recent years there is a growing debate about merging the four teams into one VB and Sumba have as mentioned above already joined forces since 2005 Royn Hvalba is playing in 3rd division in 2013 Swimming in Suduroy Edit Suduroy has recently had good results in international swimming competitions The two swimming clubs in Suduroy Vags Svimjifelag and Tvoroyrar Svimjifelag joined forces 6 September 2007 and founded Susvim which is for the whole island A young man from Vagur has had the best results until now Pal Joensen won triple gold in the 2008 European Junior Swimming Championships on the short course in the men s 400 M 800 M and 1500 M Freestyle Two years later he won silver in the Men s 1500 M Freestyle at the 2010 European Aquatics Championships 17 Other swimmers from Susvim have also had good results in Faroe Islands and in Denmark and other countries and at the Island Games competitions Rowing in Suduroy Edit There are two active rowing clubs in Suduroy Vags Kapprodrarfelag from Vagur and Frodbiar Soknar Rodrarfelag from Tvoroyri and the villages around Trongisvagsfjordur fjord There are also rowing clubs in Sumba and in Hvalba In Sumba they had a boat which was called Broddur but they have not been active for some years now In Hvalba they had a boat which was named Snopprikkur after a well known man from the history of Suduroy Suduroyar Sagnir Vags Kapprodrarfelag has these boats Royndin Frida which is a so called 5 mannafar Smyril which is a 6 mannafar and Toftaregin which is an 8 mannafar and Vagbingur which is a 10 mannafar Frodbiar Soknar Rodrarfelag has the boats Firvaldur which is a 5 mannafar Firvaldur means Butterfly Firildur and Hulda are also 5 mannafar Tvorabaturin is a 6 mannafar Sudringur and another Tvorabaturin are 10 mannafar there are two boats which are called Tvorabaturin which means the boat from Tvoroyri 18 Gallery Edit Lighthouse Akraberg build 1909 View towards south from the headland of Akraberg which is the southernmost tip of Suduroy Sumba The westcoast between Beinisvord and Vagur Porkeri Hov with Borgaknappur in the background Famjin Tvoroyri seen from M F Smyril Vagur Hvalba and Litla Dimun Glyvrabergsgjogv west of Sandvik Asmundarstakkur west of Sandvik M F Smyril the ferry between Suduroy and Torshavn Hvannhagi View towards north from Beinisvord Suduroy References Edit Statistical Database Joensen 1981 pp 211 245 Changes in population by born dead migrated village and month 1985 2020 us fo Archived 2015 07 15 at the Wayback Machine US fo Archived 2013 10 21 at the Wayback Machine Heimabeiti Hvalvagir godkendar Heimabeiti in Faroese Retrieved 2020 08 20 BirdLife International 2012 Important Bird Areas factsheet Suduroy Downloaded from http www birdlife org on 2012 02 24 Vagsverkid www sev fo in Faroese Archived from the original on 14 February 2021 Mikladal Poul A December 2005 Sustainable energy in the Faroe Islands the role of hydropower PDF Faroese Prime Minister s Office p 15 Retrieved 1 March 2017 Solorka www sev fo in Faroese Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 a b 40 green energy in the first half year of 2021 www sev fo in Faroese 15 July 2021 SEV recommends wind turbines for Suduroy SEV 2014 10 02 Archived from the original on 2 March 2017 Retrieved 1 March 2017 Hitachi Energy 7 5MWh BESS project to help Faroe Islands towards 100 renewables by 2030 Energy Storage News 16 December 2021 Vindmyllulund i Porkerishaganum www sev fo in Faroese History of SALT Folk a ferd Strandferdslan 100 ar Tvoroyri Strandfaraskip Landsins 2017 Swimmingworldmagazine com Archived 2012 08 19 at the Wayback Machine Drekin fo Archived 2011 07 20 at the Wayback MachineSources EditHagstova fo Faroe Islands Statistics SusvimBibliography EditJoensen H D 1981 Sambandid foroyinga og utlendinga millum Hugleidingar um vidurskiftini fra 1273 til 1856 The relationship between Faroese and foreigners Reflections on the trade from 1273 to 1856 in Faroese Frodskaparrit External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Suduroy Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Suduroy Look up Suduroy in Wiktionary the free dictionary Visitsuduroy fo General travel information about Suduroy Sudurras com Sudurras The News Portal of Suduroy SSL fo Time schedule of Smyril the Suduroy ferry and busses Smyril The ferry to Suduroy Painting Courses in Suduroy Art Gallery Oyggin Ruth Smith Art Museum Photos on Flickr tagged with Suduroy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Suduroy amp oldid 1130874183, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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