Back in January I began planning a hiking and touring trip of Iceland with my dear friend Judith Hopkins (both our husbands are cold-weather curmudgeons, though they would call it an "allergy").
Why Iceland??? We both love rugged landscapes and challenging terrain having earlier traveled together on a National Geographic Expeditions trip to Tibet and Everest Basecamp I. That trip (possibly the subject of a future post here) was headed up by Peter Hillary, son of legendary Everest climber Sir Edmund Hillary. For a variety of reasons, mostly related to professional obligations and physical training time constraints, we opted for Iceland over a more "exotic" and distant locale.
I had recently read a book by French nature photographer Patrick Desgraupes: Islande: Le Sublime et L'Imaginaire and it provided Judith and I all the inspiration we needed to pick Iceland as our destination. I had fallen in love with Desgraupes' stunning images of the island which is geologically the youngest land on Earth. Iceland is a country of staggering raw beauty where active volcanoes and glaciers coexist in an almost surreal harmony. Having seen it, I now understand how Iceland became the inspiration for Jules Verne's "Journey to the Center of the Earth."
It is so astonishing to walk through country so alive and violent - surrounded by the pungent smell of sulphur and the sounds of bubbling lava - that you almost feel as if you are witness to the birth of the Earth itself. The landscapes are truly awesome (in the classical meaning of the word), with desolate black lava fields, glacial ice and surreal shades of blue, green, yellow, orange and white.
All buildings in Reykjavik are covered with corrugated metal siding
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Icelandic children are so buoyant and stylish
The Blue Lagoon is a man-made lagoon created as a by-product of
Geo-Thermal energy capture. The lagoon's waters are rich in minerals
and a swim or soak in the lagoon is a must have experience
Just one of many small calderas ofliving volcanoes scattered around Iceland
Iceland is divided between the North American and European Tectonic Plates.
What you see here is the Tectonic divide between the two plates
Land of Boiling Waters
Strokkur Geyser ready to erupt
Hiking near steaming vents and boiling mud pools
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Endless driving among desolate lava fields as far as you can see
Hiking in Landmanlauger, I felt I had entered an enchanted landscape