Snæfellsnes

We spent a couple days exploring the Snæfellsnes peninsula, shown below. For some reason I involuntarily giggle every time I see the word Snæfellsnes, hearing in the far reaches of my memory “snaggletooth” or “snuffles less.” Must be early onset dementia. Anyway, the western end of the peninsula is Snæfellsjökull National Park, named after the … Continue reading

Cratered

Cratered

We stayed at another Fosshotel near Mývatn, a shallow lake surrounded by an area of active volcanism. Here’s the view from the hotel looking across the lake. Our main purpose for stopping at Mývatn was to hike the Hverfjall caldera (elev. 1,437 ft.), a fairly symmetrical crater left by an exploding volcano about 2,500 years … Continue reading

Glacier Lagoon

Glacier Lagoon

We started our day by backtracking to the Skaftafell visitor center at Vatnajökull National Park to get advice from the rangers there about which glaciers were the best to visit at this time of year. The Vatnajökull, which translates to “Glacier of Lakes” (literally, water [vatna] glacier [jökull]), is the largest ice cap in Iceland, … Continue reading

Super Jeep

Super Jeep

On Thursday, April 25, we went on an all day, small group tour from the Midgard basecamp at Hvolsvöllur called the Þórsmörk Super Jeep adventure. Þórsmörk loosely translates to Thor’s valley. Thor, of course, is the Norse Thunder God. You know, the guy with the gigantic hammer. Leaving Hvolsvöllur, we travelled east on the Ring … Continue reading

Reykjavík

Nearly two-thirds of the 400,000 citizens of Iceland live in and around the capital city of Reykjavík (pronounced “Rayk-ya-veek”). We only spent one day there, Monday, April 22, which, coincidentally, was both Earth Day and Passover. After landing at Keflavík Airport late Sunday afternoon and picking up our rental car, we drove directly to our … Continue reading