- Remove Museums, nature conservation, cultural heritage filter Museums, nature conservation, cultural heritage
- Remove Museum filter Museum
- Remove Farm sites filter Farm sites
- Remove Settlements, Villages, Towns filter Settlements, Villages, Towns
- Remove Etne filter Etne
- Remove Bergen filter Bergen
- Remove Osterøy filter Osterøy
- Remove Defense filter Defense
- Remove Fitjar filter Fitjar
- Remove Trading posts and guesthouses filter Trading posts and guesthouses
![Smedholmen, Fitjar](https://www.grind.no/sites/default/files/styles/medium/public/bilder/sted/232/kvh_219-_bu.jpg?itok=RVN_WnRB)
![The farm steading of Årskog.](https://www.grind.no/sites/default/files/styles/medium/public/bilder/sted/1/kvh_217-2.jpg?itok=jDL5OgDI)
Årskog
Årskog farm is situated in a typical coastal landscape in a gentle terrain that slopes down from the outlying heaths down towards the fjord. The farm steading exists as it was in the 1800s. In 1980 the two brothers, Lars and Olai Årskog donated the farm with all its contents of tools and interior decoration, for museum purposes.
![Sæbøtunet in 1934](https://www.grind.no/sites/default/files/styles/medium/public/bilder/sted/232/kvh_186-1.jpg?itok=rg3jiQ5i)
Sæbøtunet
When you come into the well-tended farm steading at Sæbø just above Etne centre, you get the impression of a Sunnhordland farm from well before the time of the tractor; from the time of the horse and the scythe. The hamlet at Sæbø, one of the farms neighbouring to Gjerde, was taken over by Sunnhordland Folk Museum in 1938.
![Model of the king’s estate around 1300](https://www.grind.no/sites/default/files/styles/medium/public/bilder/sted/232/kvh_254-3.jpg?itok=epp8SSrJ)
![Havrå and the arable fields up to the enclosed meadow.](https://www.grind.no/sites/default/files/styles/medium/public/bilder/sted/1/kvh_323-1_-havraatunet.jpg?itok=fiE6Ax_w)
Havrå
In the sunny, steep fjord landscape along Sørfjorden on the east side of Osterøy is the farm Havrå. The small “hamlet” is one of the few undisturbed farming communities that gives us the impression of the large communal yards in West Norway in the 1700s, with houses built close together and strips of arable land.