The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1973, Qupperneq 22

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1973, Qupperneq 22
20 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SUMMER 1937 which the main road north passes. If you know the spot you will understand why it had never before been home- steaded. Just down off the “heath” it is absolutely the last leg of the valley, which at this point is extremely nar- row, high, gravelly and not at all that inviting from a farmer’s point of view. Although the farm includes a vast amount of land none of it is much good, heath marshes, thin grass or clumps of moss and everywhere the reddish-purple lava rock and gravel on which the first traces of Oxnadal’s grassy bottom appear. Oxnadalsa cuts a deep gorge into the valley bottom by Bakkasel coming out of an off-val- ley, Seldal. Although Egill had been relatively well-off, he lost most of his property in the divorce from his wife and it is then that he moved to Bakka- sel. As can be expected he lived in dire poverty for a while, but Egill, having a knack for making money, prospered better than would be expect- ed and gradually his circumstances im- proved. Bakkasel, located in this strategic position with regards to travellers became a stopping place for weary travellers who had either cross- ed OxnadalsheiSi or found their way along the long road from Akureyri. In either case Bakkasel was a kind of out post, the last stop, or the first one. One of Egil’s daughters, Helga Egils- dottir, married Jonas SigurSsson and after living at Bakka, Engimyri, in Oxnadal (birthplace of Tomas Jonas- son) the couple, Jonas and Helga, moved to Bakkasel after Egil’s death in 1864 and here the family was raised, at least the younger members. The children were not so few and Bakka- sel offered a meagre livelihood as might be seen from the year 1859, when Egill had lived there. A bout of unfavourable weather resulted in Egill having to slaughter half of his sheep while many died from starv- ation. Bakkasel was situated on the outer fringe of habitable land and more likely, little beyond, 'as it has not been lived in for a long time. Des- pite the hardship, the home at Bakka- sel was always a popular and busy stopping place and this is well des- cribed in a poem “Jonas i Bakka- seli” by Jon Stefansson in a book of poetry called “LjoS og Sogur”, or something like that, by Jon Stefans- son. It describes Jonas’s hospitality and no doubt all the children were familiar with the life of the stopping- place. No doubt this is a reason why Tomas Jonasson came to have a stop- ping place at Engimyri at Riverton. Jonas died in 1895, I think, and after- wards Bakkasel was built up as an of- ficial stopping place by the govern- ment and that building stands there now although no one lives there — apparently the farm farthest up Oxna- dal which is now inhabited is Engi- myri, a long way from Bakkasel. This shows on what slim means these people lived on when they had to; the farms have long since been abandon- ed as unfeasible. The poem I mentioned sheds a lot of light on the kindly character of the couple at Bakkasel, Egill and his sec- ond wife, and the very strong Iceland- ic tradition of hospitality which was carried on at the Stopping Place at Engimyri in New Iceland. The name of the book is “Lj6S og Saga” and “LjoS og Sogur” by J6n Stefansson and was published in Winnipeg.
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The Icelandic Canadian

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