Atlantica - 01.06.2006, Síða 79

Atlantica - 01.06.2006, Síða 79
ICELANDa 78 AT L A N T I CA mountain biking club has assembled a small group of elite riders. The sky is gray and it’s cold as we approach Freyr Franksson’s 1957 Mercedes troop carrier. His vehicle is a simple army-green box, stacked with bikes, not weapons, but nonetheless it feels like we are going on a military operation. Freyr assumes his position in the driver’s seat. Nobody sits in the empty space next to him. His face is weathered and it is clear that he has seen some bad paths in his day. He doesn’t say much, just watches the gray sky and road ahead. As we lumber up the road out of Reykjavík towards Hveragerdi it starts to drizzle. “First rule is never to trust the weather,” says Fjölnir Björgvinsson, a newer member of the club. “Only believe it when it says that the weather is going to be bad, because then you know that it will be either bad weather, or terribly bad weather.” Later, an hour into the ride that started by cutting through a lava field, Fjölnir and I escape the cold. We are standing near a geothermal vent, a fat twenty-foot high pipe that is issuing heavy, sulfuric steam that blows over us. All I can see is Fjölnir’s thin face. “It’s the tropics,” he says. The sound of the steam rocketing out of the one- kilometer deep shaft is like thunder. “You feel the sound in your stomach,” Fjölnir says. After passing the hill where I fell, I’m feeling good about being ahead in our group of seven, riding with Freyr and Darren Mikaelsson, an English transplant living in Iceland. The two of them rode Tibet and Nepal together. “We dropped 3,600 meters in one day,” Freyr says of the descent after having reached Mt. Everest’s base camp. “When we started it was winter, and then when we dropped it became summer,” he says from under his helmet and his red beard. “Jæja!” Darren yells in Icelandic, and we drop further down the steaming river valley. The trail is narrow and rocky. White Súla birds warble in their redoubts among the black rocks on the opposite ridge, and large swathes of yellow green moss bring some color under an ominous shield of clouds. We come to a dirt road, where I can see a Range Rover fording the river we’re due to cross. “If you ride fast enough you’ll float right over the water,” Darren jokes. Gudbjörn, in his bright yellow windbreaker, whizzes past, straight for the river. In an explosion of water and grunts he’s across. Then he turns and crosses back in a grin- filled exhibition of bravado. Darren looks at me. ‘Aw, this is stupid,’ I think, ‘Now I’ve gotta cross this river just so these guys give me some respect.’ Earlier one of the mem- bers had been slow to come down a steep section of the trail. “Oh, don’t be such a big girl’s blouse,” Darren had muttered. “How do you spell that?” I asked. Darren told me it was English and that it meant wimp. Darren forges the water. Intent on not being a big girl’s blouse myself, I bike forward. I hit the water fast, my tires grab at the slippery stones underneath. The water is so high that my feet are submerged when they come into the lower semi- circle of my rotations. I grunt. The mountain bik- ing boys yell, and my front wheel makes it to dry land on the other side. Freyr says nothing, and rides right through. Two days later, Gudbjörn leads a group of eight on the mountain biking club’s weekly Tuesday night ride on Reykjavík’s well-manicured bike paths. I’m confident; out of the eight, only Gudbjörn, Fjölnir and I have crossed the lava and the river. I’m almost a veteran. We leave from the bus station in the suburb Breidholt. I stick with Gudbjörn in front as we climb the thin asphalt path that is such a hot topic in Reykjavík. “The city is planning to continue expanding the system,” says Pálmi Freyr Randversson, a transportation engineer in the city’s environmen- tal division. “The hope is to get up to six percent of people using bikes to go to work.” Right now that number stands at 2-3 percent, according to Morten Lange, President of the Icelandic Cyclist’s Federation and one of the riders on this gray evening. 060-94ICELANDAtl406.indd 78 23.6.2006 12:42:11
Síða 1
Síða 2
Síða 3
Síða 4
Síða 5
Síða 6
Síða 7
Síða 8
Síða 9
Síða 10
Síða 11
Síða 12
Síða 13
Síða 14
Síða 15
Síða 16
Síða 17
Síða 18
Síða 19
Síða 20
Síða 21
Síða 22
Síða 23
Síða 24
Síða 25
Síða 26
Síða 27
Síða 28
Síða 29
Síða 30
Síða 31
Síða 32
Síða 33
Síða 34
Síða 35
Síða 36
Síða 37
Síða 38
Síða 39
Síða 40
Síða 41
Síða 42
Síða 43
Síða 44
Síða 45
Síða 46
Síða 47
Síða 48
Síða 49
Síða 50
Síða 51
Síða 52
Síða 53
Síða 54
Síða 55
Síða 56
Síða 57
Síða 58
Síða 59
Síða 60
Síða 61
Síða 62
Síða 63
Síða 64
Síða 65
Síða 66
Síða 67
Síða 68
Síða 69
Síða 70
Síða 71
Síða 72
Síða 73
Síða 74
Síða 75
Síða 76
Síða 77
Síða 78
Síða 79
Síða 80
Síða 81
Síða 82
Síða 83
Síða 84
Síða 85
Síða 86
Síða 87
Síða 88
Síða 89
Síða 90
Síða 91
Síða 92
Síða 93
Síða 94
Síða 95
Síða 96
Síða 97
Síða 98
Síða 99
Síða 100
Síða 101
Síða 102
Síða 103
Síða 104
Síða 105
Síða 106
Síða 107
Síða 108
Síða 109
Síða 110
Síða 111
Síða 112
Síða 113
Síða 114
Síða 115
Síða 116
Síða 117

x

Atlantica

Beinleiðis leinki

Hvis du vil linke til denne avis/magasin, skal du bruge disse links:

Link til denne avis/magasin: Atlantica
https://timarit.is/publication/1840

Link til dette eksemplar:

Link til denne side:

Link til denne artikel:

Venligst ikke link direkte til billeder eller PDfs på Timarit.is, da sådanne webadresser kan ændres uden advarsel. Brug venligst de angivne webadresser for at linke til sitet.