Iceland review - 2019, Side 31

Iceland review - 2019, Side 31
27 Iceland Review ent. This hut has no toilet or running water, so melted snow serves as drinking water. Another newer and smaller hut contains an essential outhouse, although for the uninitiated, it feels like a place best avoided. The icy cold glacier air howls around your exposed bottom, amplifying a description-defying stench that renders breathing through the nose highly undesir- able. However, that same hut also contains what is perhaps the humble complex’s greatest attraction: a steam bath! Even if the Grímsfjall huts are at an altitude of 1,700m (5,580ft) in the middle of a glacier, they’re built over an active volcano. Drilling a few dozen metres into the rock releases scalding-hot steam, used to heat the huts and power the steam bath and showers. There’s nothing like the feeling of sitting with new friends in a piping hot steam bath after a long day on the glacier, listening to stories of catastrophic storms on former trips, before stepping half-naked into the freezing stillness of the midnight sun in the middle of Vatnajökull, letting the cold dry your skin while looking speechless out over the ice sheet which stretches as far as the eye can see. You feel so small in the grand scheme of things, and yet so grateful for experiencing such a magical moment. But as Magnús said, this is no holiday: we’re here to work! The tasks are many and varied, some requir- ing a great deal of manpower. The group is split up into teams, and the first morning, work starts early. The visibility is increasing and I can catch a glimpse of Grímsfjall mountain through the clouds as I join a large group travelling towards the Grímsvötn lakes on jeeps and snowmobiles. Our mission is to drill a core from the glacier with an ice drill to figure out how much this winter’s precipitation has added to the glacier. The ice cores tell the glacier’s story: how much snow fell each year, how much of it melted, and how the ash from the last few volcanic eruptions has spread over the area. The team drills in different loca- tions on the glacier over the next few days. Another small group drags ground-penetrating radar equipment over the glacier to measure the glacier’s layers and the water levels under the frozen Grímsvötn lakes, while others attend to seismo- graphs and GPS gauges at the glacier’s edge. The You feel so small in the grand scheme of things, and yet so grateful for experiencing such a magical moment.
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