rionaleonhart: final fantasy x-2: the sun is rising, yuna looks to the future. (hope is all we have)
Riona ([personal profile] rionaleonhart) wrote2024-06-04 03:56 pm

In Iceland, A Child Calling You A Walking Piece Of Shit Is Totally Normal.

I've been a little quieter than usual lately, at first for slightly unfortunate reasons - I went down with an unpleasant stomach bug - and then for very good ones; I've been having adventures in Iceland with my dad! My mum found Iceland an unappealing prospect, so Dad asked if I wanted to go with him instead.

I wrote this entry while repeatedly listening to 'Þú ert stormur' by Una Torfa, an Icelandic song I heard on the radio during our holiday.

Iceland is a land of strange contrasts. I've seen landscapes there so beautiful they didn't seem real; I've seen some of the most offputting scenery I've ever come across. It's like being on another planet sometimes, when there's nothing but flat black sand or strange bulbous stone shapes all the way to the horizon. We were driving for forty minutes from the airport before we first saw a tree.

It's weird when it never gets dark, too; it never entirely feels like a new day has started. You go to bed when it's light; you get up when it's light; it's light if you wake up at one in the morning. The sun did technically set (11.30 in the evening) and rise (3.30 in the morning), but it never went far enough for true darkness. When I glanced out of our hotel window at half past midnight, the scene was cast in a half-hearted twilight, like someone had just thrown a light blue filter over the world. I'd occasionally find myself thinking 'what if we have to find our way back to the hotel in the dark?' and then remembering that that just wasn't a concern.

But I saw such cool things in Iceland! I'd never seen geysers before, or glacial lakes, or ice-strewn beaches with black sand, or a waterfall on the scale of Gullfoss Falls; I'd never relaxed in a hot spring. On the drive back to the airport, we caught tiny glimpses of distant erupting lava out of the car window.

We passed through the perpetually foggy Vik, which apparently boasted a lava show. The website gave the alarming description 'LAVA SHOW recreates a volcanic eruption by superheating real lava up to 1100°C (2000°F) and then pouring it into a showroom full of people.' We decided not to attend the lava show.

There's so much about Iceland that you can't really capture in a photograph. I can take a picture of some big rocks, but I can't convey the sense of looking up at these boulders and knowing that they are so big and you are so, so small. But here are some photographs nonetheless!




Gullfoss Falls was absolutely stunning. I've never seen anything like it.





The beach at Vik. The contrast between the black sand and the bright water is really striking. Mum thought my photographs of it were in black and white.

The weather was atrocious when I took the second of these pictures. 'It's the last day of May today,' Dad said, wistfully, as we trudged through the wind and rain. Later, we drove past a little cluster of sheep taking shelter under the overhang of a big boulder, which was cute.





The highlight of the trip was the glacial lagoon Jökulsárlón. It was brilliantly sunny; the mountains and the ice and the water were stunning under the light. I thought I was just walking up a slope to get a better look at a beautiful snowy mountain; I lost my mind with excitement when the ice-filled lake came into view!


I had a similar 'holy shit' moment when we parked up at a very ordinary car park ten minutes away from the spot I'd taken the above pictures, turned around to look at the very ordinary bridge behind us, and saw this through it.




The ice washes up on the nearby Diamond Beach, which was scattered with small icebergs. Dad stole some of the glacial ice from the beach and put it in our drinks, which was almost certainly a bad idea, but we seem to have come through without any ill effects.





'You missed the Icelandic cod brass band,' my dad said, when I emerged from a building in Reykjavík to meet him on the street.

'What?' I asked.

We caught up with the brass band as they paraded down the street, waving fish banners in the air. They were playing, perplexingly, the Spider-Man theme.

Later, things got even wilder. Did we just happen to show up in Reykjavík when a sea monster and a fisherman were having a showdown, or do they do this every day?

(We learnt the answer from a newspaper the next day; we'd happened to show up for the opening of the Reykjavík Arts Festival, apparently!)



I didn't see any mammals that were new to me (there are so many horses in Iceland! what do they use all the horses for?), but here are the new birds I spotted on my Icelandic adventures:

- Eurasian oystercatcher! Pecking around in the grass, where it seemed unlikely to catch any oysters.
- Common eider swimming alongside small icebergs at Diamond Beach.
- Snow bunting, hopping around in the Diamond Beach car park, determinedly and repeatedly trying to flutter into a parked car's grille.
- Arctic terns everywhere, but my favourite sighting was the terns hovering above the waves at Diamond Beach and then plunging suddenly into the surf.
- I got a good look at a couple of whimbrels, with their long curved beaks. They let me get fairly close, but when I got too close they departed at a rapid faux-casual strut, rather than flying away.
- A redwing hopping around in Reykjavík.
- I might have spotted a great skua in flight from the car, but perhaps that was just wishful thinking.

I tried to find puffins, but I had to abandon the exercise because the wind was blowing so hard I was afraid it would knock me off a cliff.

There were also some birds I'm familiar with from home: seagulls, greylag geese, wagtails, crows, starlings, mallards. I thought for a while there were no pigeons in Iceland, but I spotted a small handful hanging around together in Reykjavík.

There were a lot of swans, too, usually just hanging out in grassy fields rather than at bodies of water. At one point I saw about fifty swans sitting in a field next to our hotel, so I asked the receptionist whether the swans were being farmed or just liked to be there. They just like being there, apparently! The farmers had recently fertilised the field, she said, which attracts birds - perhaps because it also attracts insects?


In conclusion, Iceland is a really interesting place! I'm glad I went. It's good to come back to the things I previously took for granted, though, like 'trees' and 'getting dark at night' and 'summer temperatures of over 10°C'.


vriddy: Cute dragon hatching from an egg (Default)

[personal profile] vriddy 2024-06-04 03:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Great pictures, sounds like a fantastic trip! :)
felis: (upside down)

[personal profile] felis 2024-06-04 03:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Love this post, thank you for sharing it! Your impressions are really interesting, the photos gorgeous, and I always appreciate your bird talk (learnt three new species names this time). <3
misbegotten: A skull wearing a crown with text "Uneasy lies the head" (Default)

[personal profile] misbegotten 2024-06-04 03:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Sounds like a wonderful adventure! Thanks for sharing!
wolfy_writing: (Default)

[personal profile] wolfy_writing 2024-06-04 04:09 pm (UTC)(link)
That sounds like an awesome visit! Stunning landscapes!

That is funny about the cod brass band!

Definitely not worth it for the puffins. You don't want to die in a tragic bird-watching accident.
goodbyebird: SCC: Jesse brushes the hair away from Riley's face. (SCC I took you to paradise)

[personal profile] goodbyebird 2024-06-04 04:45 pm (UTC)(link)
What stunning images! I'm definitely getting some sense of scale, but yeah, the magnitude of nature evades capture.
necrophilia: default summer!!!! (Default)

[personal profile] necrophilia 2024-06-04 04:52 pm (UTC)(link)
We decided not to attend the lava show.

That's not living life to the fullest!

These pictures are amazing. I really like the black sand and the glaciers. Iceland is one of my bucket list destinations, so I'm rightly jelly you got to go.
trepkos: (Default)

[personal profile] trepkos 2024-06-04 06:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Will there, at some point, be an explanation of the title of the post?!?!

Amazing photos! How weird about the Lava Show!

There are many different kinds of "seagulls", so there may have been different ones there. Eiders are so gorgeous! We had a male here the year before last.
trepkos: (Default)

[personal profile] trepkos 2024-06-04 09:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Bizarre!
storme: (Default)

[personal profile] storme 2024-06-04 08:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, the vikings literally cut down ALL the trees in Iceland when making boats to go to Greenland. There's a bar with a huge log in the roof and there used to be a label about how it was the actual Largest Piece of Wood on the island.

Icelandic horses have a gait that is unique to them! It's a tölt!

(I fucking love Iceland and I'm so glad you had a good time)
storme: (Default)

[personal profile] storme 2024-06-04 08:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Also, you might have gotten blown off the cliff in the wind, but there's a whole tradition where the baby pufflings get thrown off the cliffs by humans: https://www.npr.org/2022/09/26/1124759293/puffling-season-iceland
sushiflop: (anotsu; bloody dreams)

[personal profile] sushiflop 2024-06-04 08:48 pm (UTC)(link)
that first photo of the shore looks like a black and white photo. amazing.
i_wish_to_remain_nameless: picture of a pale girl dressed in red with a red flower in her black hair. Her red eyes stare at you unnervingly (Default)

[personal profile] i_wish_to_remain_nameless 2024-06-04 11:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Being somewhere that doesn't get dark at night sounds like a weird experience and also one that could play havoc with your sleep schedule if you aren't used to it.
Anyway, it sounds like you had a nice trip. It's very cool that you came in time to see the arts festival.
apiphile: (maurice)

[personal profile] apiphile 2024-06-05 12:48 am (UTC)(link)
'It's the last day of May today,' Dad said, wistfully, as we trudged through the wind and rain.

If it helps it was like that here then as well.

we'd happened to show up for the opening of the Reykjavík Arts Festival, apparently

You have all the luck!

(omg snow bunting!)

Also, have you been to Norway? I think you would like the west coast thereof.
zarla: gettin carried away by parasects (gettincarriedaway)

[personal profile] zarla 2024-06-05 09:02 am (UTC)(link)
Oh man, these photos are gorgeous :O the black sand is so eerie!
eggsbenedict: (Gray)

[personal profile] eggsbenedict 2024-06-05 10:58 am (UTC)(link)
Amazing photos! Thanks for sharing.
ryulynn: erika drawing 032425 (Default)

[personal profile] ryulynn 2024-06-05 07:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Sounds like a great trip! Nice photos too. But I feel that re the getting dark at night, that would throw me off a lot.
lavendre: (Art - Peter Doig - Swamped)

[personal profile] lavendre 2024-06-07 05:02 am (UTC)(link)
Gosh that beach at Vik is incredible. So moody! It really does look like a grayscale photo haha. I'm glad you had a good trip! Thank you for sharing your photos, what a cool environment!!
solarbird: (Default)

[personal profile] solarbird 2024-06-08 03:33 am (UTC)(link)
I've never been to Iceland but I've met some of their horses and they are really pretty. ^_^
horselizard: Comic strip image of James Acaster saying "I'm quirky." (Default)

[personal profile] horselizard 2024-06-11 10:39 am (UTC)(link)
horse is eaten in Iceland

but more commonly in tesco HAHAHAHA TOPICAL SATIRE
tinkaton: narumi momose | wotakoi (♥︎ otaku)

[personal profile] tinkaton 2024-06-08 06:40 pm (UTC)(link)
oh wow, those pictures are gorgeous! I love that black sand beach. Iceland seems like a great place to visit, though I'm not sure how well I'd deal with all that walking lmao. glad you had fun!
queenlua: (Default)

[personal profile] queenlua 2024-06-11 03:01 am (UTC)(link)
I AM SO JEALOUS OF YOUR BIRD SIGHTINGS. i've never seen an eider but they look SO cool in photos dreamy sigh... (ditto arctic terns. did you know they have the longest migration of any bird? they fly antarctica to the arctic and back again every year!)

sounds like such a fun trip overall <3
horselizard: Comic strip image of James Acaster saying "I'm quirky." (Default)

[personal profile] horselizard 2024-06-11 10:40 am (UTC)(link)
amazing!!