Iceland review - 2007, Side 94

Iceland review - 2007, Side 94
ICELAND REVIEW 19 Flying in the cockpit is almost identical to f lying in coach: legs cramp, clouds roll by, gas is passed, but our landing is an eye-opener. Before this trip I was under the impression that there was endless technology behind navigating a commercial aircraft to its destination runway. Extra- polation. Triangulation. Wind velocities and something to do with vect- ors. I was wrong. The pilots scout around for the runway like an old couple looking for a parking spot at the grocery store. They point out the window and scowl at each other. “No, that’s the highway!” – “No, that’s a parking lot!” – “There it is. Land there!” Sweden is a peculiar country. The birthplace of both hardcore pornography and Volvo. The people have a certain bearing that is neither inviting nor repellent, and while they share with Iceland a common ancestry and love of fishy food, their character is di- stinctly Scandinavian: measured civility, beautiful prec is ion, and above all, tem perance and order in all things. My presence at the airport sets the Swedes on edge as there are not customarily passengers on board cargo planes. With a frosty gaze, an older woman with tight, blond braids instructs me to stay away from the horses and sequesters me to a fenced-off area. From behind chicken wire looking for Lykill, I feel slightly felonious as I watch Siggi unload the horses. The first couple of animals prance out of the crates casting smug glances at the horde of ground crew gathered around to see their arrival. Other animals are trembling and drenched in sweat, the equine equivalent to white-knuckle f liers. When I spot Lykill he is composed, if a bit curious – as any Icelander is when first setting foot on foreign ground. There are trees. Everywhere. The light is different, not as diffused. Before he can fully take in the new world, the phlegmatic woman with tight braids yanks his halter sharply and pulls him into the shed for veterinary inspection. Hours pass and the sun begins to dip behind the hills before a beater Mercedes pulls up towing a horse trailer. Three older men step out, each one with fewer teeth than one before. They have come to drive Lykill to his farm north of Stockholm, and for the first time I feel slightly apprehensive for the horse. Along the five-hour drive in the dark, we stop to fill up on gas and Swedish hotdogs several times, at which point the men smoke cigarettes and pee in the bushes, despite readily available toilets – even in the middle of Stockholm. It is at one of these stops where the youngest man (the one with all his teeth) brings me to the front of the trailer and opens a small door. There I see Lykill, looking weary but content. The man reaches up into the trough and pulls out a tuft of hay, crushing the straw between his fingers. “Ah, smell sweet?” he tells me in broken English, pantomiming the hay’s aroma of clover and honeysuckle rising to his nostrils. “This from my farm,” he says slapping his chest and striking a smile. I feel better about Lykill’s escorts and go for a pee in the bushes.

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Iceland review

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