Reykjavík Grapevine - 25.09.2009, Blaðsíða 35

Reykjavík Grapevine - 25.09.2009, Blaðsíða 35
réttIr #2: Where the fuck am I? Our second spurt of réttir was in the next county over, right next to the wa- terfall Faxi. The weather was much nicer on day two, hence a lower quo- tient of hideously coloured raingear. I saw many familiar faces from the day before, mostly people I shared booze with. Only a few sheep still ran about in the public, but the kids quickly get them to their pens and the public be- comes a zone for socializing exclusive- ly. We spent the better part of the first hour hunting down Ingimar’s friend. Somehow I found myself sitting on an old bus that someone has converted into an awesome camper, watching a dude drink out of two bottles at the same time. We found a designated driver and started making the rounds to farms. At our first stop in Einholt, Ingimar and his friend Fannar broke out gui- tars and troubadoured the shit out of the place. Then we moved on to our friend Steinka’s uncle’s farm where I make a pitcher of vodka-cranberry, eat three bowls of meat soup, play the pump organ terribly, and forbid the playing of “Hotel California.” Our next designated driver takes us over to another farm called Kjóastaðir with its gigantic stable full of various wildlife. I attempt to chase chickens for longer than is funny. Eat four more bowls of soup. Three old drunk men singing folk songs pull me across their laps as I scream for help. Suddenly I am in Reykholt, kara- okeing to ABBA with a pair of 6-year old girls. I get dragged into the dining room and sit around a table attempt- ing to speak English and Icelandic with very little success at either. Ingi- mar tells me we are going to the town ball. A real honest to god ball! With a bad cover band and couples dancing and kids hanging outside smoking and getting into romantic disputes! We dance to Icelandic standards until the place runs out of beer and we get kicked out. We then stumble through Reykholt to Steinka’s house at Lord- knows what time and pass out on the couch. The hangover and sickness that en- sued (which I have christened ‘sheep flu’) were epic, and by all means worth the journey. The experience was by far the most Icelandic thing I have ever been immersed in. From going through new parts of the country on a horse, to watching the process of gath- ering up sheep and fraternizing with older generations, the whole weekend was a wonderful blur of drunken mad- ness. I even grew fond of the giant green rain suit. 23 the reykjavík Grapevine Issue 15 — 2009 travel | Ásbyrgi 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 reBecca louDer reBecca louDer catharINe fultoN catharINe fultoN Giant Horses, Hidden Folk And UFOs A trip to Ásbyrgi is good for the imagination Sleipnir was one hell of a horse. Born of the eternally mischievous god Loki (while in the form of a seductive white mare, naturally) and Svaðilfari, the magical stallion of a stonemason-im- personating giant; and not limited to only four legs like others of his breed, this eight-legged beast was as smooth as silk and could transport his rider, Óðin, across land, water, air and even between the lands of the living and the dead. That’s enough to put Mr. Ed to shame. Then one day, perhaps a little too confident of his fancy-walking abili- ties, Sleipnir totally dropped the ball and allowed one of his massive hooves to stomp down onto the earth, leaving an imprint a kilometre wide and more than three times as long. Today, the physical proof of this godly tale is the horseshoe shaped canyon Ásbyrgi. Located in the north of Iceland, in the Jökulsárgljúfur National Park, Ásbyrgi is a sight to behold and to ex- perience. While being in a building with a whimsical shape— the penis mall, perhaps—doesn’t necessarily impact on the experience within said construction, hiking within Ásbyrgi truly feels like being miniaturized and wandering around the impression left by a horse in the mud. It’s no typical walk in the park. Meandering along the base of Eyjan, the platform-like is- land in the centre of Ásbyrgi, the bowl of the impressive canyon stretches on and on and, once the end of the island is reached, continues on and on in the opposite direction, completing the rough semi-circle. It’s as impressive as the horse that created it. Adding to the mystique, the tall vertical stone faces of the canyon and the island are rumoured to con- stitute the capital city of the hidden folk. Imagine millions of little hidden eyes peering out at you as you navi- gate your way among the stretches of berry bushes and lush green trees and prepare to feel slightly creeped out. It doesn’t help matters that the canyon makes for some echoes of epic pro- portions, transforming the hum of yet-to-be-seen cars into eerie warbling sounds of spacecrafts coming from all directions. If the fear of a monstrous horse re- turning, peeping-tom hidden folk and imaginary UFOs get to be too much and impede on your enjoyment of this gem in Iceland’s landscape, maybe forget all that and just look at Ásbyrgi from the scientific perspective: a big canyon carved out by the flooding of the Jökulsá á Fjöllum some 10,000 years ago. A less sensational tale, sure, but Ásbyrgi is sensation enough on its own. Car provided by the good people of CC Car Rental. Check them out at www. citycar-rental.com

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