Reykjavík Grapevine - 11.09.2009, Blaðsíða 39

Reykjavík Grapevine - 11.09.2009, Blaðsíða 39
tunnel—a tunnel that stretches more than ten kilometres and includes a major intersection. Considering Suðureyri has a popu- lation in the hundreds, figuring out the cost per citizen for this public work is mind-boggling. And while the tunnel, which was finished in 1996, makes tourism easy and has improved the quality of life, in the main it has served as a portal for a quiet exodus. Suðureyri got its tunnel as a political gesture in exchange for its fishing quota—the town lost its identity and source of revenue, and it got an exit. In Ísafjörður, they recommend Suðureyri as a perfect tourist attrac- tion: a quaint fishing village stuck even further back in time than Ísafjörður. The pool is indeed worth the drive. And the town is pretty. And as we drive to Ísafjörður, past dead and dying arctic tern in the middle of the road, we have already lost our sense of scope and we feel we are heading to a genu- ine metropolis. QuOTa QuOTa QuOTa My friend, an Icelandic fisherman from a family of fishermen, vents on the drive. Quota quota quota. One de- cision two decades ago destroyed the country. Every village could be feeding itself, building its own microeconomy, but instead Reykjavik swallowed the country. What's worse, those with the quota borrowed against it. This kreppa, this economic crash, my fish- erman friend says all the insane bor- rowing done by Iceland's banks was pulled from the way fishing compa- nies leveraged their quotas at 12 times their value. Everyone in the car jumps in to the discussion: in their childhood, you got fish, good Icelandic fish, five nights a week. It was spectacular. With the quota, fish got too expensive: the whole country had to change their diet. We are in a jeep full of bitterness heading in to Ísafjörður, until the fisherman who started the complaint makes me pull over. “You see that. Those little orange boats. Those are somebody's smart idea to fix the quota. And it only took 20 years.” We observe eight day-cruiser fish- ing boats in Ísafjörður's harbor. They are part of the strandveiðar, or coast fishing, program introduced by Jón Bjarnason and the Left Green party. As long as they use these tiny vessels, local fisherman can now harvest their own shores without the burden of the quota system, with certain restric- tions. Two hours later, with my embit- tered Icelandic compatriots, we head to Tjöruhúsið to taste the results of this program. This is one of those things you need context to understand. For the dozens of tourists enjoying simply cooked cod, haddock and flounder alongside potatoes and greens, Tjöruhúsið is just a fish place. Good food in a historic building. For Icelanders, Tjöruhúsið is a re- ligious experience—not quite Galilee, but close. I have just spent 48 hours with locals discussing economic de- cline, the loss of a way of life, and, strangely enough, the horrors of hav- ing to live without fresh fish. In a large century-old log cabin, skillets of fish fresh off the local boats sends all of these friends into a bliss not typically associated with food. After an hour of constant eating and laughing, I think some of them might start speaking in tongues. Every piece of white fish is exam- ined, translated, discussed, and de- voured. Then a new plate, a new fish dish, someone trying to remember the last f lounder they had. Someone's mother cooked haddock this way, but not this perfectly. We stumble out, eventually, into the soft purple of 10 PM on an Au- gust night. All the weight has been lifted. There isn't another word about economics or politics. Equipped with enormous cans of beer, we join the lo- cals for a proper night of revelry until well into the next morning. Driving back to Reykjavík and what feels like normalcy, down mountain roads flooded and shifting, the whole kreppa seems as constant and imper- sonal as the mountains we're driving on. The kreppa is here, and it will be here, and we can see it clearly. And while I loathe and will never forgive the people who have caused so much pain on a nation, and while weeks later my intellect will tell me otherwise, the mood that overcomes me driving on this Icelandic road is one of ac- ceptance, combined with a belief that staying the course is the best possible solution. 27 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 14 — 2009 Travel | Ísafjörður Fly and discover Action-packed day tours 2009 www.airiceland.is websales@airiceland.is / tel. +354 570 3030 Air Iceland is your West Nordic airline, a customer-driven service company responsible for scheduled domestic flights and flights from Iceland to the Faroe Islands and Greenland. Air Iceland offers a variety of day tour packages, in Iceland and to Greenland, which include flight, bus transfer and guidance. All these magical locations are but a short, comfortable flight from Reykjavik. Come fly with Air Iceland BORGARNES STYKKISHÓLMUR SNÆFELLSJÖKULL DRANGAJÖKULL FLATEY NESKAUPSTAÐUR BLÖNDUÓS SIGLUFJÖRÐUR BOLUNGARVÍK HRÍSEY FAROE ISLANDS AKUREYRI EGILSSTAÐIR VESTMANNAEYJAR ÍSAFJÖRÐUR VOPNAFJÖRÐUR ÞÓRSHÖFN HÚSAVÍK GRÍMSEY Blue Lagoon Geysir Gullfoss Jökullónið Kárahnjúkar Krafla Hallormstaður CONSTABLE POINT Greenland ILULISSAT Greenland KULUSUK Greenland NUUK Greenland NARSARSSUAQ Greenland AKRANES REYKJAVÍK KEFLAVÍK ÍS L E N S K A S IA .I S F L U 4 65 67 0 6. 20 09 Contact Air Iceland or travel agent for reservation. Nature’s Hot Spot Vestmannaeyjar 8 hour Day Tour Lake Mývatn Mývatn 12 hour Day Tour In the Footsteps of the Fishermen Eskifjörður 10 hour Day Tour Highlights of the North Mývatn 12 hour Day Tour Beyond the Arctic Circle Grímsey 2 or 5 hour Evening Tour A Different World Greenland – Kulusuk – Ammassalik 2 night Hotel Package Remarkable Greenland Greenland – Kulusuk 8 hour Day Tour Birds and Blue Waters Ísafjörður 12 hour Day Tour BaRT CaMeROn JulIa STaPleS "Rock in Remote Places" was inspired by the annual Aldrei fór ég suður music festival in Ísafjörður, in the West Fjörds of Iceland. Sign would be the only band to grace a Grapevine cover in the year 2008. SBB Vacant old houses, left to rot while developers waited for permission to tear them down, were increasingly putting their mark on the city centre. As luck would have it, the great collapse was only monhts away, and then nobody could afford to tear anything down anymore. Let alone build something new. SBB With summer just around the corner, we were in a sunny mood. The cover was a sarcastic commentary on the Icelandic summer, shot on a cold, cloudy day, like Icelandic summer days often are. Little did we know that 2008 would turn out to be the hottest Icelandic summer on record. SBB UEFA European Football Championship fever grabbed everyone. The Grapevine included. We found this guy playing with his balls somewhere. SBB #73 - Issue 4 - 2008 #75 - Issue 6 - 2008 #74 - Issue 5 - 2008 #76 - Issue 7 - 2008 Grapevine 101

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