Wednesday - 30 August - Day 3 of V & G
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| Jokulsarlon Glacial Lagoon |
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| We go on this lagoon in an amphibious vehicle |
| These rivers, from the glaciers, are everywhere |
| This is the view from the road nearly all the way along the coast |
| Bloody cyclists!!!!!!!!!!! |
| More lava and glaciers, side by side |
| More isolated farms, but is stunning surrounds |
| Eldhraun Lava Fields; moss on the lava flow takes 100 years to grow |
| Different looking farmhouse. Don't think it's a church! |
| Busy airspace over Southern Iceland |
After a lovely breakfast at the hotel, we set off on the bus to cross Eldhraun, the largest mass of lava ever to flow on the face of the earth. This was from the eruption of 1783, which caused many deaths not just in Iceland but also in England and France. The ash went so far up into the atmosphere that it caused a very severe winter and many crops failed. 23 000 people died in England in 1783/4 from famine and cold related illnesses. The French Revolution began in 1789 and one of the causes was the terrible famine and the starving people who had had enough of the aristocracy living high on the hob while the common man was starving to death.
One of the people on our bus - an elderly and lame American man - fell walking through the lave fields which were very uneven and hard to walk on for the fittest of us. He had a bad cut on his head but fortunately we had a doctor on the bus, a young Brazilian girl, so all was good. We took him to a clinic where he had stitches. That put us about an hour behind schedule. The poor old bloke was very apologetic but no one minded.
We had a very quick visit to Skaftafell National Park, one of Iceland's most outstanding areas of natural beauty followed by a rather longer visit to Jokulsarlon Glacial Lagoon. This was by far the most fabulous part of the trip so far. The lagoon has been caused by the glacier retreating - about 80m a year, apparently - and the icebergs break off the glacier, float about in the lagoon for a while before washing out to sea, to the North Atlantic Ocean. Lots of photos of that experience. It was incredible.
As we travelled on the bus, we could see Vatnajokull Glacier, the largest one in Europe, covering 8% of the entire island.
We then drove onto Vik for our second night there. By this time, I realised I was going to need proper walking shoes so made that my mission, though how I was going to achieve it without breaking the bank was altogether another story.
Iceland is incredibly expensive and the locals don't miss an opportunity to milk the tourists for all they've got. Winter has come early this year, according to one of the Icelanders, so the tourism will slow considerably from now on.
| More waterfalls |
| More glaciers |
| Volcano from a distance |
| Same volcano from further away |
| Farmland below the volcanoes |
| Have I mentioned the waterfalls???? |
| No? Well, here's one, not as high as some |
| This one must be really old, it's dried up! |
| Looks like Ayers Rock, but is really a volcanic plug |
| Another glacier (or the same one from a different angle) |
| Same glacier, closer up!! |
| Definitely another glavier |
| Lonely farmhouse at the foot of the cliffs |
| Mound of lava |
| Glacier/volcano - Skaftafell National Park |
| Skaftafell National Park - waterfall |
| Guess who? Same National Park |
| Climbing to the Skaf...Falls - our car park! |
| The walk to & from the falls |
| Volcano under the glacier in Skaftafell National Park |
| Sign at the Glacier Lagoon |
| The amphibious boat that took us onto the lagoon |
| The icebergs we manouvred our way round |
| Landscape of contrasts |
| More icebergs |
| Looking back at the shore from our boat |
| This is what we looked like on board |
| Seal in the freezing water - if you can see him |
| Weird shapes and sizes of the icebergs |
| More weird shapes |
| Beautiful blue ice |
| The Titanic sinking |
| Floating toy |
| Mt Something |
| Fresh blue ice |
| Ducks in the freezing water |
| Ice tower |
| Holding some iceberg |
| The Titanic from the other side |
| Eating a piece of iceberg |
| Ice duckie & rubber duckie that followed our boat all around the lagoon |
| Icebergs escaping the lagoon |
| This is the crater of the volcano that erupted in 2010, spreading ash all over the Northern Hemisphere |
| How serene and beautiful is this? |
| Lovers kissing, according to one of the Sagas |
| Another view of the offending volcano. How could you tell it's potential destruction? |
| Another glacier |
| Another farmhouse |
| Another glacier |
| Me resting, on a 45 minute climb to a waterfall |
| The said waterfall!! |
| Another weird lava formation |
| Bit of a waterfall! |
| How cold is it up there?? |


Suddenly I feel a bit better about my blog! Photos do look great and at least you have sunshine. When the sky is blue here it is the most amazing colour. Have realised that's because the sun never gets a chance to make it fade!
ReplyDeleteGreat photos and excellent narrative.
ReplyDeleteAmazing scenery! Thank you for the in depth blog, makes me wish I was in Iceland.
ReplyDeleteSome very good photos there, what an extraordinary landscape, looks like you're seeing lots and learning heaps. Keep up the good work. Love Pam and Vernon xxxx
ReplyDeleteGreat pics!!
ReplyDelete