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  1. Kollerup

    The village of Kollerup with its substantial church was originally the hub of the area now dominated by the new town of Fjerritslev. With the growth of the neighbouring village, especially after the opening of the Aalborg-Fjerritslev railway in 1897, much of the modern development bypassed Kollerup, which has thus retained a lot of its old-world village charm.
    Photo:Kirsten Monrad Hansen 2007 ©Kirsten Monrad Hansen
    Photo:Kirsten Monrad Hansen 2007 ©Kirsten Monrad Hansen
    Photo:Kirsten Monrad Hansen 2007 ©Kirsten Monrad Hansen
    Photo:Kirsten Monrad Hansen 2007 ©Kirsten Monrad Hansen
    Photo:Kirsten Monrad Hansen 2007 ©Kirsten Monrad Hansen
    Photo:Kirsten Monrad Hansen 2007 ©Kirsten Monrad Hansen
    ©Kort & Matrikelstyrelsen
  2. Horneks Odde

    Horneks Odde is located centrally on the north coast of Læsø as part of a system of beach ridges on a large plain. The shallow waters off the spit were used for seasonal fishing, with the fishermen moving into primitive 'lobster huts' dug into the beach ridge.
    Photo:Knud Nielsen ©Knud Nielsen
    Photo:Knud Nielsen ©Knud Nielsen
    Photo:Kirsten Monrad Hansen 2004 ©Kirsten Monrad Hansen
    ©Læsø Turistbureau
    ©Læsø Turistbureau
  3. Rønnerne

    Rønnerne has been emerging from the sea since medieval times as a result of the land uplift and the area is still growing today. Flooding by the sea and clay subsoil were the prerequisites for production of salt on Rønnerne until 1652. Today, salt seething and its history can be observed at Læsø Seething Hut's working exhibitions.
    Photo:Læsø Turistbureau ©Læsø Turistbureau
    Photo:Læsø Saltsyderi ©Læsø Saltsyderi
    Photo:Læsø Saltsyderi 2003 ©Læsø Saltsyderi
    Photo:Thomas Rettsløf 2003 ©Thomas Rettsløf
    Photo:Læsø Turistbureau ©Læsø Turistbureau
  4. Østerby harbour

    Østerby harbour was established in 1905 as a refuge on the rough north coast of Læsø for fishermen on the Østerby peninsula. Today the harbour is still the home of a large fleet of cutters and an active fishing industry.
    Photo:Kirsten Monrad Hansen 2004 ©Kirsten Monrad Hansen
    Photo:Østerby Havn ©Østerby Havn
    Photo:Østerby Havn ©Østerby Havn
  5. Østerby-Bangsbo

    In Østerby, you can see examples of the seaweed houses with their roofs of eelgrass, a building custom peculiar to Læsø, and by Bangsbo there are a number of the so-called 'gardens', which used to be islands in the uncultivated outlying fields.
    Photo:Knud Nielsen ©Knud Nielsen
    Photo:Kirsten Monrad Hansen 2004 ©Kirsten Monrad Hansen
    Photo:Marie Dam Mortensøn 2005 ©Marie Dam Mortensøn
  6. Kvassheim fyr

    Photo:En Kjede av fyr 21.06.2006 ©En Kjede av fyr
    Photo:En Kjede av fyr 21.06.2006 ©En Kjede av fyr
  7. Obrestad fyr

    Photo:Rune Idsøe 08.04.2005 ©Rogaland Fylkeskommune
    Photo:Hå gamle prestegard 13.03.2006 ©Hå kommune
    Photo:Hå gamle prestegard 13.03.2006 ©Hå kommune
  8. The old highway

    After the road connection across the Agger Tange spit between West Jutland and Thy was cut by the flash flood of 1825, the Oddesund crossing point grew in importance.
    Photo:Ib Bjarne Sørensen 2003 ©Struer Museum
    Photo:Unbekannt Unbekannt ©Struer Museum

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