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general

A Blue Lagoon goodbye

The timing was good, so what better way to go to the airport than via the Blue Lagoon? One of Iceland’s biggest tourist … attractions? Traps? I’m not sure. For a geothermal spa (with water coming from a nearby geothermal power plant) it’s not cheap, but it was definitely a nice way to wind down before getting on an aeroplane to fly home. The pale blue water is full of silica and sulphur (I’m sure my hair still smelt sulphurous on the flight home), and is deliciously warm.

Along with access you get a little plastic bracelet. It allows you to lock all your clothes in a locker, and to buy drinks from a lagoon-side bar if you fancy. There are buckets of silica mud around to make yourself look silly (also some possible benefit to your skin, I don’t know). And the waterfall really does give an amazing shoulder massage.

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general travel

Return to Reykjavik

Snippets from the drive back to town…

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general travel trip reports

Jökulsárlón (Big fat glacier lagoon)

Jökulsárlón is the biggest glacier lagoon in Iceland, filled with giant chunks of glacier which have calved from Breiðamerkurjökull (jökull means glacier). It’s also filled with seals (well, a few at any rate) and boat buses full of tourists who don’t get to go life-threateningly close to the glacier, which is no fun at all.

After spending some time melting, the small glacial icebergs float out to sea and escape.

After having our fill of watching enormous glacier chunks and seals, we drove down the road to check out two of the smaller glacier lagoons nearby. Breiðárlón was so unimpressive that I’d suggest you could set up a similar attraction by throwing a few half-melted icecubes into a particularly muddy mud puddle.

Fjallsárlón on the other hand was quite cool. Still much muddier than Jökulsárlón, it had a lot of glacier chunks floating in it, and a calving glacier toe barely any distance away.

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general travel trip reports

Out in the Eastfjords and to the glaciers

sheep

Ubiquitous Icelandic sheep is ubiquitous

 

church

Seyðisfjörður church – one of the many cute painted churches you see around Iceland

 

fjord

Driving along the east coast on a blustery day

 

baby

The Moosling, terribly excited about all the rocks he has to eat

 

the road

Driving up alongside a rampaging glacier – in places the road was so steep you could barely see past the bonnet

 

glacier and sea

Glacier and sea – it was a fantastic view, and hard to capture in a single photograph

 

glacier

Glacier close-up

Categories
general travel trip reports

Into Askja

Askja is a stratovolcano in the Icelandic highlands. We headed straight there along the F910 in the morning, and managed to cross both of the fords on the road (although there was a lot of eye closing, and we wouldn’t have wanted to stop in one of them). Wending our way through endless circles, we drove on through the Ódáðahraun (Evil Deeds Lava). Driving through old lava flows is not a straight road kind of process.

through lava fields

The clouds were lurking low, and we couldn’t see the Queen of Mountains, nor Askja itself.

sign

Driving on up past the huts, we entered the cloud. Sitting in the parking lot, it started raining. Miserable and cold outside, we decided to hang out and eat lunch before walking in to the crater lakes.

lava field in cloud

Öskjuvatn was the larger lake, from a huge 1875 eruption. Viti, the smaller, was filled with semi-warm water. Not quite hot spring temperature, it hovered around an indoor swimming pool kind of temperature

craters

Warm enough that it seemed a good idea to clamber down the muddy sides of the crater and go for a swim. Shortly beforehand it had been snowing – the swim was brief.

swimming

And then it was back again, out along the path (we made the Moosling crawl the whole way).

crawling

And back out to the Ring Road – but first, the lava, and the rivers to ford.

leaving again

glacier melt river

Glacial melt rivers like this made me very appreciative of bridges