This is a summary of INCREDIBLE ICELAND told in photos. This post is for my brother and anyone else who would rather see more pictures and read less writing. First photo is Fjallsárlón glacial lagoon. It is located to the south of the larger and more famous, Jökulsárlón glacial lagoon. The glassy surface is a perfect mirror for icebergs and glaciers. At this time the lagoon was frozen solid. We picked up rocks and flung them forward. They hit the frozen surface like thick glass and made a sound like a musical instrument. It was a hollow, clear sound and it had a twang. I can’t even put it into words. When someone threw a rock it skimmed across the…
Aurora Disco
Did I see the Northern Lights? Check it off my bucket list? The lightshow in the sky was the whole motivation for braving the Icelandic winter. Why not go in summer when the weather is nicer, the days are longer, and you don’t have to see the countryside in a 6-hours of daylight whirlwind timeframe? To see the Aurora Borealis of course. Everyone on my tour came as an Aurora hunter and it was pretty much the only “must do” on our collective wish list. On the first night, when our G Adventures CEO (Chief Experience Officer) Oliver was going over the itinerary, we were all thinking, cut to the chase, get to the part about the Lights. YES,…
Solheimar Ecovillage Iceland
As a G Adventures Ambassador of Change one of my roles is to share the story of G Adventures and their non-profit Planeterra Foundation, and the good that they are doing together in the world. Planeterra connects local communities with global travelers. G Adventures supports Planeterra financially and also provides the structure for bringing travelers to Planeterra projects around the world. This is their vision: “A world where people create their own economic opportunities, places are protected, and cultures are celebrated through travel.” In Iceland, Planeterra has a partnership with the Solheimar Ecovillage. This inspiring, self-sustaining community is a place for disabled and non-disabled people to support each other and live together in harmony and mutual benefit. It sounds like…
Epic Glacier Hike & Lagoon
My G Adventures group and I are hiking on a slice of Iceland’s largest glacier today, November 18. The guides must approve our hiking boots for proper ankle support otherwise we’ll be forced to rent their boots. We’re getting heavy duty steel crampons and ice picks. Our glacier guide Christian says the ice picks are for photo ops. Hah. We’ve arrived at Vatnajökull National Park and after we are all approved and loaded on a minibus we’ll drive to the path where the glacier hike starts. Icelandic has a lot of pronounciation rules. Here’s where we’re at. There’s like 7 vowels. The drive from the equipment rental area to the glacier trail is better than a ride at Six Flags. …
G Adventures in Iceland
I’m on my G Adventure in Iceland. November 16-November 24, 2019 I’ll be captive to a mini bus, my CEO and 11 other adventurers from around the world. I say around the world, but 6 out of 12 of us have come from the US and out of that, 4 people are from Chicago. The rest are from the UK, Canada and Croatia. We all have one thing in common that gives us an immediate shared experience and camaraderie. We all love to travel. Our G Adventures CEO (Chief Experience Officer) is Oliver. He is a young German man who came to Iceland years ago to live and work here. At one point he might have thought it was temporary,…
Northern Light Inn
My friend Tina was the first person I ever knew to go to Iceland. This was back in the late 90s or early 2000s when no one was really going to Iceland. Back then she told me it was like the surface of the moon. Which I really didn’t understand. Because a) how did she know what the surface of the moon was like and b) what in the world made the geography like something out of this Earthly world? I finally have an answer. It’s the lava landscape. Iceland was formed a long time ago from volcanos and earthquakes. And as the earth moved and erupted and land rose from the ocean and the lava came pouring out of…
Iceland’s Blue Lagoon
November 13, 2019. 8 AM. I’m on the plane on my way to Iceland. Technically I’m on my way to Portland, Oregon. I decided to fly out of John Wayne Airport, instead of having John drive me to LAX at the break of dawn. I was supposed to go non-stop SNA to Seattle, but at the last minute the flight got cancelled and I got re-routed from SNA to Portland to Seattle. When I left the house this morning I took a package of Trader Joe’s orange cranberry scones with me. My husband said, why are you taking those? I said, because food is really expensive at the airport and in Iceland. Maybe I’ll want a snack. He said, that’s…