Iceland review - 2014, Side 74

Iceland review - 2014, Side 74
72 ICELAND REVIEW For the next ten years, djúpavík was a booming town, bringing thousands of tons of the ‘silver of the sea,’ as her- ring was called in iceland, to the factory, improving the financial status and living standards of the whole Strandir region. However, in 1948 and 1949, there were hardly any catches, and despite attempts to keep the enterprise running, the fac- tory closed for good in 1954, 60 years ago. after that, the village was abandoned again, until Hótel djúpavík was established in the old women’s quarters of the laborers’ housing facilities and conservation of the factory began. Reaching djúpavík could not be simpler. the village lies at a distance of only 280 km (173 miles) from Ísafjörður and 340 km from Reykjavík on the dead-end road number 643, which is in rugged condition with huge potholes and cling- ing to steep slopes: iceland’s rawness up close. along the way, you will see on one side the beautiful coast- line dotted with vast expanses of Siberian driftwood, and on the other side, you will see high mountains, numerous brooks and massive rocks. When entering djúpavík, the first thing you will notice is the rusty hull of the 100-year-old former passenger and cargo ship Suðurland (‘South iceland’), waiting to be photo- graphed before it disappears into the frequently-incoming fog, creating an anomalous atmosphere that no other place in iceland can match. * deStiNAtioN on the right is the herring factory built 80 years ago, in 1934.

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