Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Lava, animals, roads

It's been awhile since our trip to Iceland, but this last post has been pestering me. Images are yet emerging in Harlan's darkroom and we're still learning about this intriguing island.


Lava

Maybe being impressed by all the lava in Iceland is like being impressed by all the snow in Antarctica, but, well, I guess it's possible to be so impressed in both places. One way lava in Iceland seems a bit different to me from in the islands of Hawaii, for example, is that it doesn’t have thick plant growth or urban development covering much of it. You’re always aware of volcanic rock, at the waterfalls (here's our friend John),


and under any layer of green,



and at black sand beaches:


There's drama in the old eroded lava,


and in vast plateaus of new flow. This US Navy airplane was abandoned after crashing at Solheimasandur in 1973 (all survived), providing the perfect setting for an album cover.


Animals

Icelandic horses or ponies are special to this island, the only horses allowed here, and if an Icelandic horse leaves the island it is not allowed to come back. We stayed at one of the places where you can spend your vacation riding these horses into the country.


One thing that seemed a bit of a cultural leap to me is this horse hide for decor in the hotel lobby:


We saw sheep everywhere, little clumps, near the road or visible only as smudges in the highest or remotest reaches of a landscape.



Woolens are for sale everywhere, gorgeous handmade sweaters, scarves, gloves, and more--at boutique prices, a far cry from the shopping (raiding?) we norte americanos can do in Mexican markets.



And it's not the Galapagos. Even the sheep, out on their own most of the year, don't let you get close, and the wildlife keeps a wary eye and distance. Flocks of ducks well offshore paddled seaward even if we were up on a road above the beach, returning as we headed away. Maybe they've noted those geese on the clothesline in Djupavik, or maybe they've seen this menu (guillemot is a sea bird):


We did see lots of birds from a respectful distance, and I rather like this picture I snapped, though I usually have to point out the swans:


We were pleased to glimpse some puffins, mostly silhouettes flying between cliffs and a flock offshore, but by luck I intruded, overzooming, on this one:



Roads to ride

When we think about going back, it might well be to ride our bikes as much as for anything else. The paved roads are beautifully maintained, smooth, and lightly travelled, at least in the Westfjords. The dirt roads seem rideable, though we understand they can turn to rough tracks pretty quickly--like this main road taking a lot of rain:



The weather would be the diciest factor, with scarce warm shelter to fall back on in the remoter places. But these tempting roads promise breathtaking drops down sweeping turns into luminous valleys, and climbs that cling to rock faces over surf, lovely enough in a car but so powerfully moving on a bike.


We brought home Omar Smari Kristinsson's first volume of The Biking Book of Iceland. Even back in California the photos and descriptions make for good daydreaming: "This is not the Netherlands," he says.  And, "One might have to wade more fords than mentioned in this book. Some rivers can become impassable or fatally dangerous." He warns, "Autumn is a difficult time for biking in the Westfjords. Those with less limited self-control will constantly fall prey to the temptation of feasting on the wild berries. In some places one does not even need to step off the bicycle to shovel berries into one's mouth."


See that little track along the coast? Let's go!


Takk for reading, l.

Who were we?

Sandy, Mark, Yar, Harlan, John, Our Fearless Leader Bill Schwab*, David, Robyn
*His work: www.billschwab.com; and workshops and tours: www.northlightworkshops.com. Highly recommended!

John and Yar let us admire their daily van packing skill,


and we just as happily packed ourselves in neatly.


Only to jump back out again at first chance.


Thursday, September 19, 2013

Water

Well, yes, it's an island, it's rainy, it's snowy, and fishing is central to the economy, but that doesn't convey how water in all forms permeates your experience.

Of course, you're never far from the sea.




Harlan on the island's west-most point, the trailing edge of Europe:


Rain swept through just about every day while we were there, and snow a couple days, and hail--the classic line that if you don't like the weather, wait 15 minutes, might as well have originated in Iceland.











Water is part of a landscape, the way the sky is.






Whether fresh or salt, it is glass clear.




And, of course, there are waterfalls, so many that you start to kid around, rolling your eyes about pulling over to snap pictures of yet another. The huge Gullfoss waterfall is magical with mist flowing up from the water that pounds down.









































You can walk behind Seljalandsfoss waterfall if you've brought your jacket (odds are you probably have) or don't mind getting wet (odds are, you already are, at least slightly)--see the tiny figures left of center here:



Stop the van, another waterfall!


Dynjandi waterfall merited a long visit; I have a good video that's too painfully slow to load, so you'll have to go see it for yourself.




Water here embodies what could make for another post of its own about the contrasts in Iceland--forbidding, hard lava and thick, soft moss; uninhabited country and omnipresent sheep; living and breathing water while your laundry dries overnight: that is, anywhere you go, the water might be freezing or might be boiling. The center of Iceland has a big glacier and others are scattered over the island; you can drive close for access to this one (I could have included this shot in the Color post, no?):





Not all that far from this ice, water boils out of the ground.



I wish I could load my video of this little pool, center of this frame, as you could see and hear it bubbling like a cauldron over a fire, which I guess it is:









Iceland has the original geyser (Geysir); this one, Strokkur, is just a short walk away:

It fires up every five or ten minutes; you can sort of tell when it's ready to go because of the way the pool starts to surge and roll.

I was taken aback that it's not like a fountain, or a hose under pressure, it's an explosion, absolutely throwing water skyward.