15 photos
Having arrived in Iceland two days early, I played the role of advance scout, tasked with a weather report and some suitable clothing recommendations. After a morning hike behind the hotel during which I wore a base layer and light sweater, I sent an e-mail to my colleague, Jack, back in balmy New York: “The parka may be overkill. You can bring it but I think a sweater and good rain gear should suffice.”
MORE PHOTO ESSAYS: Sabi Sands Game Reserve, South Africa | Hiking Woo-Myun Mountain | Summer in Portugal
Two days later, we were standing in a howling gale peering into the maw of a 300-foot crevasse. I squinted across at Jack, who was barely visible in the whiteout, snow and blowing ice pelting our reddening faces. He pulled back the fur-lined hood of his parka and shouted above the wind, “Remind me to never take clothing advice from the guy from Minnesota!”
Iceland exists as if out of the mind of a science fiction writer — not in the futuristic sense, but as some timeless place, where the elements that created the earth meet the people who harness its power. A deck of stock images spring to mind: volcanos, glaciers, hot springs and catchy pop bands, perhaps. And indeed, we experienced all of those during a week there. This is a raw place inhabited by inventive and strong people, descendants of Vikings, who drive monster trucks, eat rotten fish and heat their homes with volcano-heated water. It is perhaps the most exotic place on Earth. And it’s only a five-hour flight from Manhattan.
I also came to know it as a place of volatile weather. After breakfasts of strong coffee, smoked salmon and fresh Icelandic yogurt called skyr, our small group set forth in jacked-up Ford Excursions with 47-inch tires to explore the backroads (or in some cases, no-roads) of southern Iceland. Over the course of the day, we had all four seasons — rain, sleet, snow, sunshine and winds that threatened to pull these two-ton trucks right off of the road. Our driver laughed it off, navigating the narrow roads while shuffling Of Monsters and Men on his iPhone. It was no use complaining. To experience Iceland, one must also experience its weather. There is not one without the other and I quickly grew accustomed to keeping a jacket handy, hood ready to deploy.
A Little Bit of Luxury