If Norwegians vote down European Union membership on Monday as the polls are hinting, the union's northern border will run right through Arnulf Odegaard's farm.
"It'll be interesting to see what happens," said 55-year-old Odegaard, who plans to vote against joining the EU, even though it might mean giving up his rented hay fields in Sweden."Sometimes you have to think of the good of the whole country," said the farmer, who lives along the roughly 930 mile Swedish border.
Borders are a hot issue in the run-up to Monday's national referendum on membership, especially since neighboring Swedes and Finns approved joining.
In the heavily anti-EU arctic provinces of Norway - which don't want to share their fish stocks with the EU - a group claims it wants to form a new country if the more populated south swings vote in favor of joining.
Last week, would-be separatists in the arctic city of Tromso were gathering signatures on a petition for independence for north Norway, Sweden and Finland.