In February my wife and I spent 10 days travelling around Iceland with an old South African friend who has been living there for 30 years with her Icelandic husband. From Reykjavik we travelled north to the centre of the country where we dived in the rift between the expanding continental plates of America and Eurasia. The water was two degrees celsius and as clean as any water to be found on this planet- a surreal experience!
We raced skidoos over a glacier, visited thermal hot springs at Geysir, saw numerous impressive waterfalls, saw chunks of ice from a glacier being washed up on a beach and travelled along the stunningly beautiful east coast up to their home in the tiny fishing village of Faskrudsfjorder for a few days. We then then headed across the northeast wastelands to the country’s second largest town Akureyri (20,000 people).
We headed north to the country`s northernmost town Sigluforder, inside the Arctic Circle. This was once the centre of a huge herring fishery but as usual it was overfished by boats from all over Europe and the fishery collapsed in the 1960s. We stayed in a little cottage in the mountains to the east of Akureyri and witnessed the Northern Lights on the only cloudless evening we had during our 10-day trip.
Ed’s note
Iceland, and Northern Europe in general, ranks highly on my list of places to see. The photo opportunities, especially up around the Northern Lights, are remarkable. Check out these two cool time lapses: Why I shoot lights at night and Awesome time lapse of Iceland’s midnight sun and you’ll see what I’m talking about.
We sent Justin Fox up there in 2012 to check in (and check out) at The Ice Hotel in Sweden: Lapland’s fairy castle, but another great way to see this part of the world is by boat, on a Northern Europe cruise.