Northwest ICELAND
Part 4/4
Akureyri>Laugarbakki Village>Budir>Borgarnes>Reykjavik
Tunnels - Waterfalls - Lava Fields - Ravines - Shipwrecks - Canyons
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More Fun Facts
Iceland is considered an Arctic country, however only a small portion of it is actually north of the Arctic Circle; just the Island of Grimsey at latitude 66.55334. The furthest north we drove to was near Manartakki, (a couple of days ago) at latitude 66.20449. Just 0.3 degrees south of the Arctic Circle or as a distance ... approximately 35 kilometres. So, my personal goal of driving across the Arctic Circle in all Arctic countries won't happen ... drat; I'll have to settle for just visiting them all I suppose.
I imagine winter driving can be quite treacherous in the more remote parts of Iceland. Many farms seemed to have both a high-hoe (to dig a hole or maybe, dig a vehicle out) and an Arctic Truck 'build' (or the equivalent) parked in the driveway. We passed one large, expensive estate along the north coast and the landowner had a snow cat at the ready.
Iceland probably has the tastiest drinking water you will find anywhere! It's available everywhere here, you can drink as much as you want and ... it's FREE!
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JOURNAL
I've used the Iceland font for Icelandic placenames where we stayed on our driving route or as sidetrips we took and for some Journal details.
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Photography
Cameras: NIKON Coolpix P610 & CANON DSLR EOS Rebel T8i
* For all photos from the 4 posts that were published for this trip, see our Trip158 gallery. Viewing our photography this way, has the advantage of displaying the photos as full screen on your monitor. But, just so you know ... there are several hundred.
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Day14
Route: Akureyri > Laugarbakki Village
Sidetrip: > none
Distance (Daily / Cummulative): 285.3 / 2261.0 kms
Hiking (Daily / Total): 2 / 93.4 kms
Camp09: 1 night @ Hotel Laugarbakki
A bright, sunnyπand clear morning ... still fortunate with the weather; this is our day 14 and we've only had 2 days with mild drizzle and some overnight heavier rain.
Four tunnels today, 2 single lane and one of the double lane tunnels was 7 km long; a new record for us. Mostly a driving day along the coast, no hikes just some short walks. We're following the 'primary' Eyjafjordur, Skagafjordur and Hunafjordur fjords and heading westerly.
Siglufjorour Look closely and you'll see the avalanche fencing (photos above and below) across the high mountain slopes above the village. This is the northernmost village that you can drive to in Iceland. To get here you can bypass the tunnels and still follow the old mountain road (only in the summer months) ... it's the highest road in Iceland. We took the tunnels ... π |
Whooper Swans |
______ Day15 Route: Laugarbakki Village >Budir Sidetrip: > Stykkisholmsbaer Distance (Daily / Cummulative): 268.1 / 2529.1 kms Hiking (Daily / Total): 1 / 94.4 kms Camp10: 2 nights @ Hotel Budir It was a very rainy day; drizzle with periodic heavy rain and a lot of fog higher in the mountains. The drive also passed through an area of new highway construction, so much of the road surface was gravel. Fortunately, the weather cleared somewhat and enough times, for us to take a few pictures along coastal Highway 54 ... we decided it has the most dramatic scenery of the 2529 kms we've driven, so far in Iceland ... the vibrant Autumn colours probably helped us reach that conclusion. Shipwreck in the foreground and the fishing village of Stykkisholm in the background. There are nearly 2700 islands in the bay north of the village. That's a lava field you're looking at. Stykkisholm (Stock Photo) ______ Day16 Route: @ Budir Sidetrip: Budir > Olafsvik Distance (Daily / Cummulative): 135.6 / 2664.7 kms Hiking (Daily / Total): 7.41 / 101.8 kms Camp10: 2 nights @ Hotel Budir Rain overnight, early morning low fog, drizzle, cleared before noon, fogged in again by mid-afternoon, heavy rain around 4 pm, high 13 C. Gewme (that's how he pronounced it) at the National Park visitor centre, told us this is the nicest September he can recall. Even though it rained today, this really is only the 2nd half day (in 16) we've been 'rained out'. Hotel Budir ... our accommodation for 2 nights. On the south coast of Iceland’s SnΓ¦fellsnes peninsula, there’s a village with only a hotel and a tiny black church called the BΓΊΓ°akirkja. It was erected in 1703 by Bent LΓ‘russon, who was a merchant in BΓΊΓ°ir. It rotted down but was rebuilt by Steinunn SveinsdΓ³ttir in 1848. Legend has it that she did this following a request by Bent LΓ‘russon in a dream. Friends RauΓ°feldsgjΓ‘ is a deep, high and narrow ravine in the cliffs south of the glacier SnΓ¦fellsjΓΆkull with a dramatic story and family tragedy attached to its name. The location is near the tiny hamlet of Arnarstapi. Seen from the road, it looks like a small crack in the berg that slid just a bit, enough for people to enter and observe. If you look closely, you can see 2 hikers just at the entrance. BΓ‘rΓ°ur was according to BΓ‘rΓ°ar Saga SnΓ¦fellsΓ‘ss the settler of this area, half a troll, and half a man, his father was half a titan, but his mother was human. BΓ‘rΓ°ur came to Iceland in the 9th century and gave the peninsula its name, SnjΓ³fellsnes peninsula, but both words "snΓ¦r" and "snjΓ³r" mean snow in Icelandic. In ... Snaefellsnes National Park Note: Remainder of the photos in this post are taken in the NP. Driving the Budahraun Lava Field - estimated eruption date 250 A.D. ______ Day17 Route: Budir > Borgarnes Sidetrips: > Gianni & Hraunfossar Waterfalls Distance (Daily / Cummulative): 242.7 / 2907.4 kms Hiking (Daily / Total): 4.7 / 106.5 kms Camp11: 1 night @ B59 Hotel Some overnight rain, early morning drizzle, some low fog; then it cleared for several hours in the afternoon ... by 6 pm the drizzle moved back in. Just a couple of easy walks today. We only have a short drive to our final (on the road) nights stay at Borgarnes today; then it's back to the capital; Rekjavik for a couple of additional days, before flying home to Canada ... this adventure is winding down. ... just another beautiful canyon! Last Lupins of the season. The locals believe it to be the dwelling place for elves and trolls. The lava field that Hraunfossar trickles through flowed from an eruption of one of the volcanoes lying under the nearby glacier of LangjΓΆkull, the second largest ice-cap in Iceland. The waterfalls pour into the HvΓtΓ‘ river from ledges of less porous rock in the lava; that seemingly originate in a field without a river or a lake. The water is actually streaming through rivulets in the Hallmundarhraun lava field. ______ Day18 Route: Borgarnes > Reykjavik Sidetrips: None Distance (Daily / Cummulative): 160.7 / 3068.1 kms Hiking (Daily / Total): 2.0 / 108.5 kms Camp12: 3 nights @ Iceland Air Hotel Mostly a clear day, high 15 C. The highlight of our final driving day was the trip along the inside coastline of the scenic Hvalfjordur fjord. This cairn holds an emergency food cache. Carefully piled rocks formed into a cairn make a landmark. In centuries gone by, cairns could mean the difference between life and death in the less hospitable parts of Iceland. They would break up long journeys on foot and reassure the weary traveller that they were indeed on their way to their friend’s farm or the next village, and not over the edge of a hidden cliff, or into the mouth of a volcano. Important stuff, right? Iceland’s cairns are carefully catalogued and are protected structures. Some of them are hundreds of years old, and one is even believed to be the oldest structure in the country—literally built by one of the Viking settlers. Unfortunately, in recent years, modern-day visitors have started building a lot of cairns of their own. ... All. Over. The. Place. Much like the proliferation of countless Inukshucks in Canada's north (and south); this cultural appropriation by uninformed people only has the effect of making both of these symbols irrelevant. Personally, I knock Inukshuks down and scatter the stones; when I find them in places they shouldn't be.
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Next
Flight from Reykjavik ICELAND > Toronto CANADA
Regroup and repack for some LOAFin Around in October ...
Then, 5 weeks swimming with the fishes in Cozumel MEXICO ... December 2022 to January 2023.
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