Iceland review - 2012, Side 74

Iceland review - 2012, Side 74
72 ICELAND REVIEW enter winter After a glorious summer with warm days and bright nights, the cold and dark sea- son is upon us. This year, the autumnal equinox—when the day and night are of equal length—occurred on September 22 and the First Day of Winter falls on October 27. As of November 1, driv- ers are permitted to equip their cars with studded tires for winter traction and leave them on until April 15. The first Sunday in Advent this year is on December 2, which in many homes marks the beginning of cookie baking, laufabrauð (‘leafbread’) making, clean- ing and decorating for Christmas. The winter solstice—the darkest day of the year—arrives on December 21, at which point Reykjavík sees less than four hours of daylight and grímsey, Iceland’s north- ernmost inhabited island, which lies on the Arctic Circle, two hours and 15 min- utes. In the narrow fjords of the North, West and East, the mountains block out the sun completely for more than two months during the darkest period of winter. Its reappearance at the end of January is celebrated with sólarkaffi (‘sun- shine coffee’) and pancakes. In Ísafjörður in the West Fjords, sólarkaffi is always on January 25 at the first glimpse of sun since November 16; that’s 70 days of darkness. ESA the kids are all right The ‘youth 2012’ survey on the circum- stances of eighth, ninth and tenth grad- ers (13- to 15-year-olds), published by the Icelandic Ministry of Education in September, contradicts the popular belief that the youth of today is less civilized than in previous generations. The ratio of tenth graders who consume alcohol has dropped from 42 percent in 1998 to 7 percent in 2012 and the number of smokers in that age group is down from 23 to 3 percent in the same period. In 2000, 12 percent of ninth and tenth graders read books other than school books for four hours or more each week. That ratio is now up to 16 percent. At the same time, the number of those who never read for leisure decreased from 37 to 27 percent. The ratio of ninth and tenth graders who spend time with their parents after school on weekdays has risen from 25 percent in 1997 to 49 percent among girls and 44 percent among boys in 2012. Teens also spend less time outside after 10 pm, 50 vs. 25 percent, and party less; 2 percent attend parties on a weekly basis, down from 11 percent in 1997. ESA Photos By Páll StEfánSSon F a c t s & F i g u r e s f&f Here are a few facts you might not know about the Republic of Iceland and the island rock on which it stands. the 63 lawmakers At Alþingi, the Icelandic parliament, 63 parliamentarians sit, making law and order in the Republic. Nine of them are lawyers by education, seven teachers, six economists; five have a degree in political science, five in philosophy and five only a high school diploma. Four parliamentar- ians have studied literature and three have no formal education, one of whom is a poet, another worked as an flight atten- dant (PM Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir) and the third in fish processing. In parliament there are two farmers, two fish captains, two linguists and two biologists. There is only one art historian in Alþingi, one historian, one business administrator, one veterinarian, one film director, one nurse, one practical nurse, one metal industry worker and the other government leader, Minister of Industries and Innovation Steingrímur J. Sigfússon, is a geologist. PS

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