The 1000 is unique visits, not hits (there are about 4 hits per Norwegian-speaking user). Of course, it is possible that the Google Analytics cookies were cleared, but in that case people were still returning later to see more articles.
There is a difference of perhaps 100 visits between this month and last month. There is no noticeable spike and the number of hits remained about the same. I do not think Wikipedia had a large impact there.
It's certainly true that a founder is required, though I think there are other reasons specific to the Swedish community for the lack of editing by others. That is why I am here to ask you. I did not just want to put a site up and then have nobody edit. It needs a leader who speaks Norwegian, and who has a connection with the Norwegian community.
If even one person is truly interested in creating a Nynorsk furry wiki, I would help them. Perhaps that person will be you, if you feel more confident about it later. I am merely trying to be realistic: currently, far more visitors to WikiFur appear to use Bokmål, so a wiki using it as the language is likely to be more useful and has a better chance to attract contributors.
Wikipedia is important - no question. But it does not have to be the only game in town. Wikipedia and WikiFur serve different, somewhat-overlapping communities. I started WikiFur because Wikipedia was not interested in covering furry fandom to the depth that would be useful for us. They are not going to have articles on most individual furries, or a little Scandanavian furmeet - it would not be verifiable, for a start. Yet these articles would be interesting and useful to furry fans in Scandanavia. There are currently 125 furry articles on the English Wikipedia, but about 100 times as many in WikiFur.
I cannot say what would be more
fun - that is up to you - but there's no reason you can't edit both. I
edit on Wikipedia too; in fact I help with
WikiProject Furry and the
furry portal there. One editor may wear many hats. When I become tired with working on one site, I go to the other one.
We do have
one wiki that supports the different dialects of Chinese. I do not know of a similar method of automatically translating between all Scandanavian languages, though; I agree that it would probably discourage people from editing the articles. You can translate articles between different languages yourself, and then link them together, in the same way that Wikipedia does - we link to both
WikiLurv (with sv:) and
TurriWiki (fi:). As these are completely separate sites, it would be harder to merge them.