Iceland review - 2013, Page 41

Iceland review - 2013, Page 41
ICELAND REVIEW 39 changed everything. I decided that I didn’t want a stressful job anymore.” And it isn’t just the hotel staff who are seeking a break from city life. According to Ingibjörg, it’s increasingly appealing to visitors. “Some people come here to just get away from it all, to relax and reenergize,” she says. “It was really trendy for Icelanders to come here on a day trip. They took the morning ferry, had lunch and then left in the evening. Now they prefer to stay two to three days and just relax,” she continues. “We recently had a German man stay for one week. After arriving on the island he canceled his plans to travel around Iceland and just stayed here!” Ingibjörg has spent part of the last 30 summers on Flatey and says she always looks forward to her time on the island. But it’s not like there isn’t anything to do. The hotel makes up for the lack of traditional enter- tainment with concerts, a ball and knitting nights. “Everyone joins in—the locals and even some of the guys come and learn how to knit.” SEABIrDS AND SOLITuDE It isn’t just the peace and quiet people come for, though. Breiðafjörður’s natural beauty is complemented by its rich bird and marine life. Puffins, eider ducks, shags, kittiwakes, fulmars and the occasional white-tailed eagle are among the bird species found in the area while the bay also boasts blue, fin, humpback, minke and killer whales. “A lot of people come here to see the birds. Breiðafjörður is a bird paradise,” Ingibjörg says. Bird habitats are constantly shrinking and less food for certain species of birds has meant a rapid decline in numbers, Ingibjörg points out. “But the situation in Flatey is still fairly good,” she adds. At roughly two km long and half a km wide (1.2x0.3 miles), Flatey is the largest and last year-round inhabited island of the many islands, islets and skerries in Breiðafjörður; there are an estimated 3,000 making up more than 50 percent of the country’s coastline. Separating Snæfellsnes peninsula and the southern West Fjords, the bay runs 50 km (30 miles) wide and 125 km (78 miles) long and apart from the countless islands is char- acterized by unique basalt rock formations and the aforementioned colorful bird and marine life. After peaking at 400 in 1900, the human population on Flatey now consists of just two farming families during the winter but during the summer the island is an increas- ingly popular tourist destination. In former times, the island was important both as a fishing center and as the hub of the com- mercial life of Breiðafjörður, with merchants

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Iceland review

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