Reykjavík Grapevine - 08.02.2008, Blaðsíða 45

Reykjavík Grapevine - 08.02.2008, Blaðsíða 45
Article | Reykjavík Grapevine | Issue 02 2008 | 25 movies. There are no trains in Iceland but it is easy to imagine this place as a transit station at the edge of the railway, as a neural node of explor- ers’ and adventurers’ trails knotted in the bravest attempt to colonise the solitude of the Highlands. Transition, movement, casual meetings and ex- changes are what seem to characterise Nýidalur most profoundly. I recognise some of the faces around from memories of different places. A group travelling with Hálendisferðir proves particularly friendly and keen to save me from the risk of starvation that my missing box has cast upon me. In the afternoon of the second day, two young German hikers hit the hut. They have been going in the opposite direc- tion of a portion of the same route that lies ahead for me. I question them about Þjórsárver and we spend all evening investigating maps, discussing equipment, exchanging tales and GPS points. I depart from Nýidalur in the first hours of a morning buzzing with movement. My box has finally arrived. It was brought the night before by Siggi, Soffía’s husband, and he will be in charge of the hut for the next few days. We exchange some words while sipping the first coffee of the day and staring through the window at the frost that the night has left behind and the array of caravans ready to leave the campsite. “This is the centre of the Highlands” he tells me with a gleam in his eye. I nod in assent. I cover the ground to Þjórsárver in a few hours of marching under a gentle driz- zle, traversing a no-man’s-land made of greyness, stones and pebbles. I wake up to my alarm clock at 3:30 in the night: it is time to wade, and the favour of the morning’s earliest hours is required, however masochistic that may feel. The weather condi- tions look optimal for the upcoming challenges: entirely dry, still, and as cold as it gets in July. It must be roughly 8am when I start the Þjórsárkvíslar crossing: the dreaded springs of Þjórsá, Iceland’s longest river. One after the other, I leave behind all the threads of an endless web of streams and rivulets. I feel a mixture of relief and disappointment about the smoothness of my progression, but it is not meant to last much longer; it is promptly dissolved by the appearance of the river’s last branch, frightening in all its breadth and might, surrounded by the notoriety of grim tales and warnings. The water’s depth varies in a range generously estimated to be between 50cm and 150cm. The prospect of confronting a violent flow up to my chest has admittedly been the source of many headaches over the last few days. In the end, however, the Þjórsárkvíslar will not treat me that badly. The water level suddenly rises above my waist, but with a detour upstream I am able to find a relatively innocuous course in shallow wa- ters, all the way to the other bank. I do not know how long I have been soaking in the river, prob- ably some ten minutes. What’s certain is that as I gain the high ground again, the bite of the cold has made me totally hazy, I am speaking in tongues and can hardly remember how to spell my own name. I climb to the top of Arnarfell, where the met- aphor of the “heart of Iceland” gains shape and re- ality. A tight grid of arteries and veins spreads over the plains of Þjórsárver, vital lymph pumped by the glacier on the periphery of the island. The tor- ment of additional wading is temporarily avoided by cutting across the nearby glacial tongue: the grim and photogenic Múlajökull. It is a breathtak- ing 5km walk along razor-sharp edges of ice and sudden chasms. Despite all the thrill and wonder, however, my farewell to “the heart of Iceland” is not an ideal one. I start my third day in Þjórsárver under the encouraging omens of high pressure and a new wind blowing from the South. I naively think that this blessing of the weather gods will descend upon me. Misplaced hope: in a couple of hours I am bathed in a torrent of rain. For several kilo- metres I find myself walking in sandals and un- derwear, my bare legs exposed to the lashes of the wind and water showering from the sky: a last unpleasantness imposed by the swamps around Nautalda and the sequence of streams left to be crossed. I assume that I have finally crossed the last river, get my clothes and my boots on only to find out that I am wrong – for the second time that day. The westernmost branch of the Blautukvíslar is still before me – and the evening’s late hour and ceaseless rain have roused the river into a muddy fury. I am about to make camp and give up, but the thought that circumstances may not be any more favourable the next morning eventually con- vinces me to persist. It takes no less than three at- tempts and plunges into the water, and a number of bruises, before I finally find the right wading spot. As I reach the other side and set up my tent for the night, I still feel the wet and freezing clutch of the river upon my skin. I am exhausted by what has probably been the hardest and most miser- able day in three weeks of walking. Comfort and warmth in the welcoming resort of Kerlingarfjöll, however, now lie only one day ahead. Text by Fabrizio Frascaroli – Adventures of the Lonesome Traveller, Leg 6 www.bluelagoon.com Energy for life through forces of nature Photos by Fabrizio Frascaroli

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