• Fazenross
  • Fazenross

Eurotrip 2007

Traveling through Iceland, the Faroe Islands, Ireland and the UK. Leggi altro
  • Old Whaling Ships

    7 giugno 2007, Islanda ⋅ 11 °C

    Afterwards, he took a taxi back through the old town and past it to Hvalstöðin Whale-Watching Centre on the old harbour at Faxaflói Bay. Good thing he had a cell and the BSR taxi number entered! Taxi fares were quite high despite the small size of the city, usually Ikr 520-1000. He was glad he wasn’t driving himself, as the capital’s drivers were often inconsiderate, Ron noticed, with people yattering into mobile phones (illegal, in case you’re wondering), drifting across lanes or cutting corners at junctions.
    At the harbour were rusting old whaling ships, moored directly opposite the whale-watching companies. Hvalur 6, 7, 8 and 9 were their names. Ladders and gangplanks enabled Ron to climb aboard for a closer look. Iceland was taking heat internationally for its whaling activities. Ron took this moment to dip his bare feet into the Faxaflói Bay, a chilly experience.
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  • Elding Whale Watching

    7 giugno 2007, Islanda ⋅ 11 °C

    He got on the 5pm whale-watching boat owned by Elding Whale Watching. This trip out to sea lasted three hours and cost Ikr 7600. There were others on board for the trip, he bid them Halló or Gott kvöld (Good evening). The tour used a quiet oak-hulled boat to minimise disruption so they could get astonishingly close. They all saw white-beaked dolphins, humpback whales, harbour porpoises and minkes, which often came right up to the boat. He also got stunning views of the peak Esja, across the fjord in southwest Iceland. It rises to 914 m.Leggi altro

  • BSÍ bus Terminal

    8 giugno 2007, Islanda ⋅ 10 °C

    Then it was time to visit the Golden Circle – Geysir, Gullfoss and Þingvellir National Park. This tour could be done in a day. Ron had to get up early to be at the BSÍ bus station by 8:30 am to catch the bus for a guided tour. He barely had time for breakfast. He could actually see the sun for a while before it was covered again with thick clouds.Leggi altro

  • Eden greenhouse in Hveragerði

    8 giugno 2007, Islanda ⋅ 12 °C

    First it was off to a tomato hot house, the greenhouse Eden in small Hveragerði, to see how Iceland can produce foods under glass. It was Iceland’s nearest thing to a tourist trap, and all passing tour groups were shepherded through its doors. Having said that, there were worse places designed to separate fools and money. Bananas and papayas added a touch of the tropics, there’s an enormous postcard selection; and it sells Hveragerði’s famous Kjörís ice cream, made just round the corner.
    Ron had some tomato soup (tómat súpa) for 1000 Ikr! Ron didn’t know how this guy got the contract for the tour busses to stop here, but he was making a killing on tomato soup at $9 US for a cup. Granted, it was excellent soup, and Ron got it himself, but really, Ikr 1000? He had a gift shop as well. This guy was one smart dude. That soup was the best tomato soup Ron had ever had, made with freshly picked tomatoes, but the price left him crying in his soup. He did like that the farmer had a water closet (bathroom) that he let the tourists use.
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  • Geysir

    8 giugno 2007, Islanda ⋅ 13 °C

    Geysir (pronounced GAY-zeer) is the original blasting hot-water spout after which all other geysers around the world are named. The Great Geysir debuted in the 14th century, blasting a jet of water up to 80m (262ft) into the air. By the 1950s tourists had clogged it with rocks and rubbish, thrown in an attempt to set it off. The geyser ceased erupting and was mostly inactive for decades. Luckily for visitors, the world's most reliable geyser, Strokkur (the Churn), was nearby, and it spouts up to 35m and erupts every 6 minutes or so. After earthquakes in June 2000, when water levels inside the geyser were artificially lowered, the Great Geysir resumed activity. The geyser erupts two or three times daily now, but to no specific timetable.
    Geysers are formed when geothermally heated water becomes trapped in narrow fissures. The water at the surface cools, whereas the water below the ground becomes superheated, eventually turning into steam and blasting out the cooler water above it. Geysir and Strokkur are surrounded by smaller colourful springs, bubbling milky pools and steam vents, where water emerges from the ground at 100°C. The geothermal area is free (it was only ever a paying venue when an Englishman owned it in 1894).
    Across the road from the geysers Ron found a tourist complex. It contained a petrol station, a café, a huge souvenir shop and Geysisstofa (Ikr500), an audiovisual exhibition on geysers and volcanoes, with an earthquake simulator and some folk museum pieces upstairs. It provided 20 minutes’ distraction, but really the geysers themselves were far more fun.
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  • Gullfoss

    8 giugno 2007, Islanda ⋅ 11 °C

    It was then on to Gullfoss, the spectacular Golden Waterfalls, created by the river Hvítá. Iceland's most famous waterfall tumbles 32m (105ft) into a steep-sided canyon, kicking up a sheer wall of spray. The spectacle depends on what the weather is like. On sunny days the spray creates shimmering rainbows over the gorge and Gullfoss can seem simply magical. On grey, drizzly days like this the falls retreat into the mist and can be slightly underwhelming. The site was once slated for sale to international bidders for hydroelectric development, but has since been purchased by the government and set aside as a national monument.
    Above Gullfoss was a small visitor centre and a good café (snacks Ikr500-980), whose speciality was lamb soup. A tarmac path suitable for wheelchairs lead to a lookout over the falls, and a set of steps continued to the water.
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  • Þingvellir National Park

    8 giugno 2007, Islanda ⋅ ⛅ 11 °C

    Þingvellir National Park was the site of the world’s first democratic parliament, the Alþing, established here in AD 930. A UNESCO Heritage Site, it had a superb natural setting inside an immense, fissure-ridden rift valley caused by the separating North American and Eurasian tectonic plates. They are pulling apart at a rate of a few centimetres per year. It is now possible to see the long, deep crack where they are pulling apart, and many people throw coins in there for luck. Helgafell, to the north of the capital, is the holy mountain that figured so prominently in Icelandic history and literature, though in reality it's a 73m hill. This was where the first Icelandic þing, or legislative assembly, met. Farmers from all over Iceland would come to this place every year in the summer to debate their problems, deliver justice, marry their children, and have a good time exchanging news. But it was later moved to the flat promontory Þingvöllur after assembly members defiled the sacred mountain with their toilet ablutions.
    There was an interesting Interpretive Centre at Þingvellir. There he learned more history: Many of Iceland’s first settlers had run-ins with royalty back in mainland Scandinavia. These chancers and outlaws decided that they could live happily without kings in the new country, instead creating district þings (assemblies) where justice could be served. Eventually, a nationwide þing became necessary. One man was dispatched to Norway to study law, while his foster brother travelled the country looking for a suitable site. As mentioned above, they first chose Helgafall, but when that site was ruined, another was chosen - Bláskógur – now named Þingvellir (Parliament Fields). It lay at a crossroads by a huge fish-filled lake. It had plenty of firewood and a setting that would make even the most tedious orator dramatic, so it fitted the bill perfectly. Every important decision affecting Iceland was argued out on this plain – new laws were passed, marriage contracts were made, and even the country’s religion was decided here (the Christians won out over the pagans around 1000 AD). In the Alþing, Christians and pagans had been polarising into two radically opposite factions, threatening to divide the country. Þorgeir, the lögsögumaður (law-speaker), appealed for moderation on both sides, and eventually it was agreed that Christianity would officially become the new religion, although pagans were still allowed to practise in private.
    The annual parliament was also a great social occasion, thronging with traders and entertainers. Over the following centuries, escalating violence between Iceland’s most powerful men led to the breakdown of law and order, a time called the Sturlung Era. Viking chiefs fought others with private armies and ignored the decisions of the þing. Governance was surrendered to the Norwegian crown and the Alþing was stripped of its legislative powers in 1271. It functioned solely as a courtroom until 1798, when it was dissolved entirely. When it regained its powers in 1843, members voted to move the meeting place to Reykjavík.
    The Alþing used to convene annually at the Lögberg (Law Rock), between the Flosagjá and Nikulásargjá fissures. This was where the lögsögumaður recited the law to the assembled parliament each year. After Iceland’s conversion to Christianity, the site shifted to the foot of Almannagjá cliffs, which acted as a natural amplifier, broadcasting the voices of the speakers across the assembled crowds. The Alþing typically lasted two weeks. The site is marked by a flagpole, and a path leads down to it from the multimedia centre at the top of Almannagjá. Decisions were reached by the Lögrétta (Law Council), made up of 146 men (48 voting members, 96 advisers and two bishops), who are thought to have assembled at Neðrivellir (Low Fields), the flat area in front of the cliffs. All free men were allowed to watch the proceedings, and single men often came looking for wives.
    Behind the Þingvallabær farmhouse, Þingvallakirkja was one of Iceland’s first churches. The original was consecrated in the 11th century, but the current wooden building only dates from 1859. Inside are several bells from earlier churches, a 17th-century wooden pulpit, and a painted altarpiece from 1834. The Independence-era poets Jónas Hallgrímsson (1807 – 1845) and Einar Benediktsson (1864–1940) are interred in the small cemetery behind the church. Both men made a significant contribution in the nationalistic revival leading to Iceland's independence.
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