Iceland review - 2013, Qupperneq 27

Iceland review - 2013, Qupperneq 27
ICELAND REVIEW 25 Earlier this summer, emergency services in Iceland were kept busy helping tourists who ran into trouble. In a span of less than a week, travelers drove their rental car into a pit on a highland road that had yet to be opened, hikers were trapped by bad weather on a mountain ridge, and 250 volunteers spent 24 hours searching for a young woman who had failed to return from a short walk. This is her story. By eygLó SvALA ArNArSdóTTIr PHOTOS By PáLL STeFáNSSoN at 10 am on Friday, May 31, Maylis Lasserre, a 24-year- old woman from France working at Heydalur, a farm guesthouse and tour operator in the epony- mous valley in the fjord Mjóifjörður in the West Fjords, decided to go for a short walk. “I wanted to hike up to the mountain and just be away for two hours. There wasn’t too much snow and I’m used to hiking,” she says. Overjoyed with the first signs of summer after a harsh spring and over- whelmed by the vastness of nature, Lasserre kept walking, in spite of not being dressed warmly or wearing proper boots. “I guess I didn’t think clearly. It was a lovely day and I just kept going. At 3 pm I could see that the fjord wasn’t far away but I was too high up [to return the same way] and couldn’t walk anymore because of the shoes. They kept filling with snow and falling off at every step, so I had to walk back and put them back on. My socks were soaked and my feet were wet. I had to take the shoes off and just left them there.” Lasserre con- tinued walking barefoot. “It’s hard to admit that I was being stupid, but I was, leaving with bad shoes and no equipment. I had no phone and was only wearing jeans, a fleece jacket and a big scarf. I hadn’t brought any food because I only expected to be away for two hours.” Eventually, Lasserre couldn’t carry on because her feet were too sore. “It’s strange to feel blocked. What should I do now? I decided to stop and warm up my feet by wrapping my scarf around them. I made a shelter for my head and feet as I realized that the rain was coming. Then I just had to wait. I put my hands inside my jacket but I was trembling.” Meanwhile, the alarm had been raised at Heydalur. Lasserre, who had worked there since April, had been expected to take travel- ers on a horseback tour at 2 pm. She had told a colleague that she was going for a walk but not where exactly. There were indications that Lasserre had taken a different route, a frequented hiking path up the mountain Galtarhryggur on the opposite side of the valley, so that’s where the people at Heydalur went looking. However, the search proved fruitless and the emergency services had to be contacted. “We received the call-out at 1 am on Saturday morning. The police had first carried out a field search investigation to check whether the missing person might have spent the night in Ísafjörður, for exam- ple, to make sure this was an emergency,” says Jón Arnar Gestsson, member of search and rescue team Björg in Suðureyri and board member of the Zone 7 district man- agement for Slysavarnafélagið Landsbjörg (ICE-SAR), a network of well-coordinated volunteers responsible for search and rescue in Iceland. Zone 7 stretches from the inner- most part of the fjord Ísafjarðardjúp, from which Mjóifjörður extends, in the northeast, to Dynjandisheiði mountain pass in the southwest. When Lasserre went missing, Jón Arnar directed operations from the ground, leading 249 people from 72 rescue squads. They searched on foot—some teams had Maylis Lasserre and the farm’s dog Loki.
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Iceland review

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