Jökull


Jökull - 01.01.2021, Side 82

Jökull - 01.01.2021, Side 82
Gísladóttir et al. By now the flood was travelling incredibly fast along the Kúðafljót river and more than filled the river course between the lava field and Leiðvöllur and was approaching the Skálmarbæjarhraun farm (Figure 2). People began to move everything portable northwards from the farm up onto the edge of the lava field, and the farmers, herders and sorters (about 30 people) spent the night in sheep sheds in a more elevated po- sition on the lava field. People could not sleep that night because many things were now unusual; there was constant thunder and crashing, a heavy sound of unseen water, falling tephra and total darkness, except when lightning flashed and illuminated the sky (Gísla- son 1919, Oddsson 1968). By morning of 13th October, the wind was from the east, so the tephra cloud no longer hid the view. Water had encircled the farm and there was a waist- high crest of ice by the farmhouse. People realised that the flood had receded but all around were enor- mous icebergs across the outwash plain where the flood had passed and the area looked like a jagged new lava field. It was impossible to travel around the area on horseback, and the herders and sorters who were on Skálmarbæjarhraun the night of the flood (12/13 October) decided to leave the horses behind and scramble over the ice fields, across the Skálm river and home to Álftaver (Figure 4). It was a week later that the horses were collected from Skálmarbæj- arhraun (Gíslason 1919, Oddsson 1968). Experience of those on the farms in Álftaver The day of the eruption, it was mostly women, chil- dren and the elderly people at home on the farms in Álftaver, although after the eruption began, some men returned from the Fossarétt sheep sorting pen. The farms stood at various elevations and some were at risk of flooding. Two of the sorters, Gísli Magnússon from Norður- hjáleiga and the aforementioned Sigurður Jónsson from Þykkvabæjarklaustur, who managed to cross the river Skálm, rode as fast as possible towards their farm area locally known as Sunnanbyggjaratorfa (this area included the farms Þykkvabæjarklaustur, Norður- hjáleiga and Hraungerði, Figure 4). With the flood entering the river Skálm just behind them (approxi- mately 167 m), they arrived at the farm Herjólfsstaðir from where they could see how the flood was spread- ing to the west. As they reached the farm Hraunbær the flood was about 400–500 m away from them. With the flood that tore across the mudflats west of Hraun- bær hard on their heels, they rushed as fast as possible all the way to their farms and when they arrived the flood had just reached Norðurhjáleiga and Hraungerði (Loftsson, 1930). It was obvious by those who stayed at the farms that Álftaver was being flooded, and people had be- gun to gather at the farms. A woman from Hraun- gerði had reached Norðurhjáleiga with her six chil- dren, and Gísli directed people from the farms south to the Virki sheep sheds on higher ground (Figure 4). Jón Brynjólfsson, from Þykkvabæjarklaustur rode east to Mýrar, where a widow with two children and a servant girl were at home (Magnússon, 1919). Guðmunda Oddsdóttir (age 12) from Þykkvabæjarklaustur was among those who fled to Virki. She clung to her hand- icapped brother who had difficulties walking and was very worried that she would lose him. Their journey was horrific; across from them the flood with huge, hurtling icebergs had arrived between the farms and filled the marshes surrounding Þykkvabæjarklaustur, reaching the churchyard. The people from the farms at Sunnanbyggjaratorfa made it to the sheep sheds and spent the night there, but it was a terrifying experience. It was pitch dark from the tephra and people could hardly see their own hands, but lightning lit the sky and thunder crashed endlessly, with barely a break and in the darkness they could hear the floodwaters which were close by but not visible. At Holt there were three farmhouses and fami- lies with many children and elderly people (a total of 32 people (The National Archices of Iceland (Þjóðsk- jalasafn), no date) out of which two were herders), but two men from the sheep sorting pen made it home to Holt before the floodwaters entered the Skálm river, and they knew that the flood was not far from the farms. Holt is 1–2 km from the Herjólfsstaðir farm which stands higher, and the men instructed all the residents to flee to there; and so, they walked along a strip of grassland towards Herjólfsstaðir. When they were about halfway, one woman realised that 80 JÖKULL No. 71, 2021
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