Reykjavík Grapevine - 04.04.2008, Blaðsíða 20

Reykjavík Grapevine - 04.04.2008, Blaðsíða 20
20 | Reykjavík Grapevine | Issue 04 2008 | Article Last summer, Fabrizio Frascaroli spent 40 days walking across Iceland from East to West. This is the final segment of his story. I spent part of two days walking along the outlaws’ trails that cross the plains and lavas of Kjölur, un- der variable weather, swinging moods, and the gloomy vigilance of the Hrútfell Mountain, the sole landmark of the area. I began to feel the savour of the passing hours changing as the end drew near. The fluttering fog banks and sudden waves of chilled air reminded me that in wraith-infested Kjölur, one is never alone. The sporadic sunbeams left my clothing damp with cold sweat under the darkening sky. The sharp icefalls of Hrútfell grew grim and painfully close, piercing the view with their pale blue radiance as warnings of the up- coming challenges, as anticipations of the bite of the ice in the days ahead. I steered westward and shivered as I approached the glacier. A more intense feeling of uneasiness and contemplation caught me while I was fetching fresh water from one of the rare springs – a gush- ing and clear stream running amidst thick moss and an unusual patch of greenness surrounded by barren land. I felt fear for the imminent glacial traverse, bitterness and regret for the conclusion of my trip coming so swiftly, and the sore grip of loneliness even harder in this menacing and for- saken place. I got cold and sat still. I don’t know how long I sat there, nor where the music came from. And really I cannot guess by what twisted unconscious path a long-buried sliver of conscience re-emerged from the farthest depths of memory. All I can say is that it was the voices of Simon & Garfunkel that finally rescued me from that sorrowful silence. It echoed in my head and rang with sounds of healing and relief, and wiped the lingering shadows of Kjölur away. I felt warmth again: I rose just in time to meet a full, yellow sun tearing the clouds apart and paint- ing a glorious day all around me. I picked the trail again, saturated by a sensation of renewal, as someone who has just shaken off an unpleasant dream. Only one question kept bugging me: why on earth Simon & Garfunkel? The Mountain Church The rest of the day brought no answers – only more wonder. Soon, Fjallkirkja appeared before me with all the might and violence of an epiph- any. Just a few days before, I had heard about a well-documented attempt to seek the Holy Grail in the vicinity of Kerlingarfjöll. If I were to dedi- cate myself to pseudo-archaeology and vaguely esoteric quests, Fjallkirkja – the Mountain Church on the edge of the Glacier – is surely the place I would begin to dig. It surfaced from the horizon abruptly, without warning, as soon as the south- ern slopes of Hrútfell were behind me – a mas- sive bulk of black rock rising from the whiteness of the ice, symmetrical in its shape, imposing in size, surmounted by a thick and rounded pinnacle spiking from the midst of its solid shoulders. In another country, or another place, it could have easily been mistaken for a man-made artefact, a forbidding Templars’ fortress maybe, erected on the hilltop to guard over some secret treasure, to mark the threshold to the glacial wasteland. I reached the summit of Fjallkirkja late in the evening, after a 500 m ascent – like a path of penitence to prepare the pilgrim for admittance to the sanctuary on top. A desert of dark-brown rock surrounded the solitary tower, slab-shaped as if to form a natural stairway. I took my place in the small hut at the southern edge of the mountain: a very basic but properly tended cabin brought there by members of the Icelandic Glaciological Society some three decades ago, devoid of servic- es and facilities except for a few beds. After dark- ness came and the first late summer stars were lit, the wind rose, vomited by Langjökull in all its wrath and anger. The howling hit and slammed the cabin’s thin walls zealously. As I lay down to rest, I felt the wooden structure faltering and shak- ing under the violence of each blow, and began to fear that the time had come for that untamed shelter – which had already endured some thirty winters at the doorstep of the glacier – to be wiped out by the geography of the mountains, and me with it. I fell into a troubled sleep, wondering what I would be waking up to. A veil of thick mist cast its dull uniformity on ice and rock alike when I woke. The wind must have ceased during the night, the air was still, qui- et, humid and relatively warm, but visibility was reduced to a matter of metres. Even the “watch- tower” of Fjallkirkja was concealed from sight, buried in the fog, reappearing every now and then as a twisted and ghostly sculpture of stone. I ventured out for a short reconnaissance trip onto the glacier. The danger of several cre- vasses – a couple of which were treacherously hidden under thin snow – made all decisions easier: I would wait another day, and not dare cross Langjökull unless under far more favourable conditions. I killed the remainder of that day in a timeless laze, melting snow to replenish my water reserves, thinking of possible alternatives to the original route, currently denied, and simply sleep- ing the hours away. I repeatedly browsed through the pages of the hut’s guestbook, pondering over the low number of visitors that seemed to have come across that enchanted place over the years – evidently neglected, and yet the most intriguing surprise in my whole journey. The cloak of fog did not lift the next morning. I left Fjallkirkja behind in a slow and sombre stum- ble down the slopes, resigned and overwhelmed by a sensation of defeat and regret. I made for the nearby Ferðafélag Íslands hut in Þverbrekkumúli. Shortly after my arrival, three Germans also hit the cabin. They offered me rum and spoke all night of the joys of such things as biting salami in the middle of a carefree hike. I left in higher spirits early the following morning. I walked due south Across the Country in 40 Days “I have been in the wild for thirty-three days, caressed places of for- gotten beauty, lived in uninterrupted proximity to dazzling landscapes, experienced the awe and sometimes the horror of Nature, and perhaps prov- en something to myself. I wonder what will remain of all this.”

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