46 SPORT IN NORWAY. 
good general shooting is to be had; but the sportsman 
must be prepared to rough it if he hopes to be suc- 
cessful. 
NortH BrercEenuuvus AMT. 
This Amt is bounded on the north by the last named ; 
on the south by South Bergenhuus; on the east it 
touches on. Buskerud and Christians Amts ; and on the 
west it is bounded by the sea. 
It is divided into two Fogderies, Yttre and Indre 
Sogn in the south, and Sondfjord and Nordfjord in the 
north. In the south it is intersected by the Sogne 
Fjord from west to eas. This noble fjord, which has 
many collateral branches, is about 120 miles in length. 
The coast is frmged with numerous islands, between 
which and the mainland the steamers to the north wend 
their way. 
Salmon are to be found in all the rivers running 
into the Sogne Fjord. 
To begin at the extreme end. The Lerpats Ey 
running out at Lerdalséren, is a good salmon river, 
and abounds with fish, though they do not attain a 
very large size. lLerdalséren can be reached either 
by steamer from Bergen, or by the route of the Fille 
Fjeld, vid Christiania. (Vide Bennett's ‘Handbook,’ 
pp. 18, 44.) The fishing in this river belongs to the 
properties Tinjum, Moe, and Lysne. That in the 
