ROMSDAL AMT. Sif 
to travel vd Christiania, so as not to miss the scenery 
of the Mésen and of Gudbrandsdal. 
This Amt is intersected by three principal valleys— 
Romsdal, Sundal, and Surendal, named after the rivers 
flowing through them. 
In the extreme south there are many small rivers, 
which may be worth trying, as sport is occasionally, 
though by no means always, to be had in them. And 
as many of them are not named in the map, I will, 
as far as I can, supply the omission by mentioning 
their names. 
And first at VANELVEN, in the extreme south-west 
of Sondmor, there is a small river, about thirteen miles 
long. A little to the east of this is Brrxepats ELy, 
fallmg out into the fjord near Kile, where there is 
a station. It runs from a lake, and its course is only 
seven miles. It can easily be reached from Néstad, 
near Horningdals Vand, which will be mentioned in 
the following Amt. To the west of this there is a 
small stream running into the bottom of a fjord. 
In the Hjérrendfjord, to the west of the last-named 
fjord, there is a likely-looking stream running out 
at Oie, where there is a station. 
All these rivers can be best and most easily reached 
by the steamer between Bergen and Throndbjem, 
which stops at Volden. Hjorrenfjord can be reached 
by carriole from this place. 
