Huldrehaugen
As mentioned, at Bødalsætra there is a mound known as Huldrehaugen. It lies around 150 metres away from the sela, and that was where the Huldre lived. There was a boy in Bødal who herded the animals, but one evening it was only the animals that came home.
They searched for the boy, but he was nowhere to be found, and they were sure that it was the Huldre who had taken him. The only thing to be done was to ring the church bells, but Lodalen was so far away from the church that the bells couldn’t be heard.
Instead they did the next best thing, they called out his baptized name: «Gabriel come out!». They found him next to a rock, and he recounted his story; he had fallen asleep next to Huldrehaugen, and had awoken when they called for him, at the same time, he saw two blue clad figures, who were laying him down.
They had drilled him out of the huldrehaugen and laid him down where he was found. Some in Bødal believed his story, whilst others thought he had made it up to get out of herding. Nevertheless, his parents refused to let him go back to herding in the woods again and his brother had to take over.
Gabriel was the brother of Sigurd Nesdal’s Great-Grandmother Ågot Bødal. She once found a beautifully patterned knitted sock that noone on the farm had seen before. She only found one and the other one never appeared. It was a bit strange, that one sock that noone had ever seen before, and many beleived that it was a Huldre sock!
Audio guides available in:Norsk bokmål, English (British)