Noctilucent Clouds — Scandinavia
In midsummer, electric-blue night-shining clouds — formed at the very edge of space — illuminate the Scandinavian night sky in ghostly waves.
About this spectacle
On clear midsummer nights above the Arctic Circle in northern Sweden, the sky comes alive with noctilucent clouds — tenuous, electric-blue filaments of ice crystals glowing at altitudes of around 80 km, far above any weather. From Abisko, where the horizon is wide and light pollution almost absent, these formations ripple and billow in slow, ghostly waves across the twilight sky. The sun never fully sets in June and July here, yet paradoxically these clouds become visible precisely when the sky darkens enough to contrast their ice-crystal brightness. Observers lie back on the tundra shore of Lake Torneträsk and watch structures morph over minutes — bands, veils, whirls, and intricate herringbone patterns — all rendered in an unearthly cold blue. There is no sound, no drama beyond the slow silent choreography above. The air is cool, the ground soft with Arctic vegetation, and the experience is one of profound, otherworldly stillness.
When to go
May — Sep, peak Jun — Jul
Getting there
Nearest airport: KRN. Nearest city: Kiruna.
Booking options
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