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There’s never been a better time to explore the Faroe Islands

One of B&R’s 2025 Limited Edition trips will take travellers to Iceland and the Faroe Islands for an adventure in the North Atlantic unlike any other. Experience Designer Orsolya Kako, who crafted the trip that is equal parts active and community based, shares her thoughts on what makes Faroe Islands so special, what to expect on the hikes and one of her favourite experiences B&R travellers will enjoy. 

How did the Faroe Islands get on your radar?

The Faroe Islands have a close connection with Iceland, a country I’ve helped travellers explore for over 10 years. At the back of my mind, I've always been curious about what the Faroe Islands were like, because I've heard so many stories about the islands—almost mythical stories—because it's so far in the middle of the Atlantic, even more so than Iceland.  

Torshavn

Coastal hike

What were your first impressions the first time you went? 

I was so struck by the purity of the country. The landscape is still relatively untouched. There are roads connecting settlements and towns, and ferry lines connecting all the islands, but not much else. And in a way, it's this amazing open slate. I was really struck by the stark nature, similar to what we find in Iceland in some places—barren, treeless, dramatic instances of land rising out of the ocean, many sheep. It is really a beautiful thing to me. I find it so inspiring to see these almost barren landscapes and to learn how people live off the land like that. 

And not just survive, but thrive, right? 

It was amazing to learn about, culturally, all the things they do that bind their community together. Learning about knitting clubs, book clubs and heimablídni—the tradition of hosting others in your home for dinner—as ways they stay connected. There are other, more practical ways too, through farming practices, like trading and selling meat to each other, for instance. They wear beautiful hand-knit sweaters and they know who knit each one. To me, it's a beautiful way of life.

Múlafossur Waterfall

Mykines

This is a hiking trip. Can you talk a little bit about the routes that people will walk? 

The Faroese say every island has its own unique views and landscapes and with our guide's help, they will be pointing out the differences on every route. It could be the direction of the sunrise and sunset and the way the light strikes our paths. Sometimes it could be the vistas of the different islands and the history in those areas.  

From a more logistical standpoint, we are walking on single-track sheep paths. These are ancient paths that the sheep create—they automatically go towards the easiest route. And we’ll pass a lot of farms and waterfalls that make up the bucolic landscape of the Faroes. 

Are there any moments that you’re especially excited for our travellers to experience? 

We will have a meal at a farmhouse with the farmer whose family trained the staff at Ræst, one of two Michelin-starred restaurants in the small country’s capital, Tórshavn, about fermentation. We will be invited to do a farm tour and see where the sheep roam in the spring and where they go up in the summertime to higher ground. We'll learn about the free-range grazing that their sheep do, and then be invited into their barn to see where the rams are kept and learn about their importance. And then you're invited into their home, a beautiful farmhouse passed down generations to the current farmer. We’ll have a beautiful connective meal together from their garden, from their sheep, and talk about life in the Faroe Islands. Being in their home is like being in a living museum. It’s a real glimpse into life in the Faroes.

Kallur Lighthouse