Hallands Väderö

Hallands Väderö (en: Halland's Weather Island) is a Swedish island located in the northwest corner of the Scania province, but it is named after the province above; Halland. Since 1958 it has been a nature reserve due to its valuable ecologic life with an old beech-forest, unusual fungi and large bird populations. During the summer season small ferries transport people to the island from Torekov. There are no permanent residents on the island at the present time, but many cabins from older times remain on the island and some can be rented for overnight accommodations. The island is also known for its large beaches that are good for bathing. In 2006 the Swedish state surveying Lantmäteriverket decided that the whole island belonged to the Church of Sweden due to an old agreement from 1753.

Hallands Väderö Lighthouse
Hallands Väderö Lighthouse
Sweden
LocationHallands Väderö, west of Torekov, Kattegatt sea, Sweden
Coordinates56.450708°N 12.542501°E / 56.450708; 12.542501
Year first constructed1884 (first)
Year first lit1909 (current)
Automated1965
Constructioncast iron tower
Tower shapecylindrical tower with balcony and lantern
Markings / patternwhite tower, greenish lantern dome
Tower height13 metres (43 ft)
Focal height21 metres (69 ft)
Original lens3rd order Fresnel lens
Current lens4th order lens
Range12 nautical miles (22 km; 14 mi)[1]
CharacteristicIso W 8s.
Admiralty numberC2242
NGA number1452
ARLHS numberSWE-170
Sweden numberSV-7173
Managing agentSwedish Maritime Administration (Sjöfartsverket)[2]

Lighthouse

The lighthouse on the island was constructed on the northwestern tip in 1884 and originally carried a kerosene lamp. It was electrified in 1950 and totally automated in 1965. In the summer of 2010 the power cable to main land was cut and the power source replaced with solar panels and batteries. The light was changed to a LED-light and the characteristic modified to preserve power. The tower is connected to a small light keepers cabin. It is owned and remote controlled by the Swedish Maritime Administration.

gollark: I will pay you one letter h if you do somehow manage to generate infinite energy this way.
gollark: I mean, it probably won't cost you much, so I guess try it if you want to, but don't expect it to do anything.
gollark: You're not going to overturn extremely well-established scientific laws with some weird apparatus and some water.
gollark: It would only go to a certain height or something, you can't make it loop forever without inputting energy.
gollark: (unless this is satire, I'm terrible at detecting satire)

See also

References

  1. Magnusson, Åke (18 August 2010). "UFS 318" (PDF). sjofartsverket.se/ufs. Swedish Maritime Administration. p. 12. Retrieved 26 December 2014.
  2. Hallands Väderö The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved April 4, 2016


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