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Lucky Week Seven

Last Sunday I spent much of the day in Akureyri, writing the last blog post and incinerating pizza ingredients. All that molten cheese must have awakened the volcano gods, as we shall see in a bit. 

A teaser.

While I was writing, Jon was teaching Axel how to drive. Icelandic gravel roads are probably a good place to learn: they have massive unpopulated stretches, wide visibility, and little to crash into. On top of that, Axel got bonus lessons in how to drive a stick-shift as well as how to drive across rivers. That last bit made me very glad to be back in the living room, writing and eating burnt pepperoni.

The next morning we set forth for Reykjavik, the final stop in our Icelandic adventure. Because of logistical snafus, I ended up with a ticket to fly there, while Jon and Axel drove the Dacia Duster all the way back. On the way they played six disc golf courses, leaving at 9 am and not getting to Reykjavik until 10 pm. I had a much different itinerary.

At 10 am I strapped on my backpack and found a Hopp electric rental scooter. The first stop was the Akureyri thermal pools for one last bid at their hot pots, cold plunge, and steam room. I am addicted to Icelandic municipal pools. From there I blow-dried my hair and scootered the rest of the way to the front door of the little Akureyri airport. Then it was a scenic 45 minutes flight to Reykjavik, and, finally, another Hopp scooter to our next housing. I find it amusing, the combination of electric scooters and airplanes.

The next place was an apartment, a 4th floor walk-up, but right on the main street with views of the fjords and Reykjavik skyline. The apartment belongs to an artist named Pall. There were cool old paintings everywhere, a jumble of a kitchen that felt like it belonged to Molly Weasley, and a sign that said "Home is where the booze is." Needless to say, I loved it.

Me in the living room at Pall's place, also, sporting a new Icelandic sweater.

Note the picture on the wall, looking a bit tilted. On the first night I felt a shudder as I was washing the dishes. Axel said, "was that an earthquake?" I said that it was either an earthquake or someone downstairs slammed a door really hard. Then, a few minutes later, the whole place shook and we were both certain it was an earthquake. A half hour after that the house shook so hard and for so long that the two of us dashed to a doorway. I squeezed Axel and started to reconsider the merits of the fourth floor walk-up.

It turns out that biggest quake was a 4.8 centered about 30km away on the Reykjanes Peninsula. There were several more small shakes over the next few days, and as I was on work phone calls I started telling my coworkers about it. It is hard to keep droning on about software while the computer is shaking off the desk.

Over the next two days, as I toured the Reykjavik thermal pools and coffee shops, I would ask locals what they thought of the shaking. The consensus was that "some volcano was waking up," but also that earthquakes, while not a daily thing, are definitely a regular part of life on Iceland. 

Talk of volcano was very exciting for Jon. When we first chose to come to Iceland we searched for active eruptions, but there were none. At the time I said to Jon something like "there is, on average, an eruption every three years, maybe one will begin before we get there." By Wednesday morning, two days before we were to leave, one had not yet begun.

Then on Wednesday night, as I was working, Jon and Axel went out for fish and chips. Jon came back, eyes sparkling, and announced, rather officially "It is the talk of the town; the fires have begun again. At 1:18 pm today, the eruptions on the Reykjanes Peninsula have commenced." 

At the dining table Jon and Axel set up shop, charting last year's Reykjanes flows, looking at trail maps, and reading information about how to avoid poisonous gases while eruption-hunting. They reserved a car and then Jon went to sleep like a kid on Christmas Eve.

First thing in the morning, off the volcanic explorers went, in search of the hot stuff. I had to work at 2pm, and I also was not super excited about barging in against some safety guidelines. Maybe if my lifelong dream was to see some lava I would have taken the day off and taken the risks, but that was not the case. I did have a dream to scooter to a new Reykjavik thermal pool though, which is technically heated by lava. Close enough, right?

The boys were successful at finding the lava and Jon was as full of wonder as I have ever seen him. He is not often giddy, but Thursday Jon was giddy. I predict a lava addiction in his future, which is fine by me. I hear the surfing is good in Hawaii. 

Here is the whole week in photos and videos:


Axel learns to drive.

Then Jon drove back and Axel took this picture from the window. 

The next day we left Akureyri, me via scooter, then airplane, then scooter. Here is a short video I made of my trip. 

I was so excited to see our attic in Reykjavik. This was the view out the bedroom window.

View from the living room. Note the fish and chips shop, in green, where Jon and Axel found out about the eruption.

On the second floor landing this sweet little kitty was almost always at the window.

On Tuesday morning I went on a self-guided tour of town. While out I heard lots of music and actually made a playlist of every song I heard on the streets of Reykjavik. If you have Amazon Music you can listen to my Reykjavik playlist.

Several years ago an original Viking settlement site was discovered downtown, so they built a museum around it. Here we see the hardened stacked peat remains of a Viking sheep pen from about 1400 years ago. 

The view from the back of City Hall.

These seagulls have their ducks in a row.

A pair of swans swimming past the City Hall. Just inside those pillars is a wooden relief map of Iceland that measures 800 square feet! And they have free coffee. Worth a visit.

A small section of the giant map.

This seagull and I checked out the famous statue of the faceless bureaucrat. Icelanders do not take a lot of crap from their politicians, but the seagulls do give it.

Moving on to the nearby Parliament building, there is a statue of Ingibjörg H Bjarnason, the first woman elected to Iceland's parliament. Women gained the right to vote in Iceland in 1920 and Ingibjörg gained office in 1922. I think it is interesting she went by Bjarnason and not Bjarnadottir; I wonder what the story is there.

On the walk back I saw some neat buildings.

This one was painted on all sides.

While I was out touring the town, the boys were playing lots and lots of frisbee golf. On Wednesday they made a loop on electric scooters, playing seven courses in one day. Then, of course, word came in about the volcanic eruption.

Lava Expeditions Planning, Inc.

The text Jon received as he crossed into the Reykjanes area.

The boys on the walk. They had to hike 7 km in with no real guarantee they would be able to see lava. Jon said they just kept walking and the smoke and the helicopters gave them hope they were going the right way.

Pay dirt! They found the lava.

Jon's selfie with the flow.

Axel takes a shot of dad standing with the lava.

Videos of the action.

Jon said these were 40 feet high. It is hard to fathom the scale in video.

While the guys were lava hunting I was on day three of walking around town. In the early 1900's, basalt pillar tombstones were popular in Iceland. Several places in this cemetery looked a bit like Stonehenge because of all the raw pillars.

These stones had a yellow lichen that I did not see anywhere else in the graveyard. Maybe it came in on the original stone and it is very slowly spreading.

Hólavallagarður cemetery was interesting because it is practically a forest in what is otherwise a country somewhat light on the trees. Originally Iceland had lots of trees but they were cleared by early settlers. In recent years individuals have made efforts to reforest, which is going well but slow. Here at Hólavallagarður I imagine the urge to plant and nuture the trees in memoriam pre-dates the eco-friendly urges, so the cemetery has a head start.

On the walk back from the cemetery I found this painted tunnel.

And this nice wall.

Selfie on the painted streets. Many of the pedestrian-reclaimed streets here are vividly painted. The main street has a hundred square hopscotch that goes on for two whole blocks; it is the world's biggest hopscotch.

On our last night in Iceland I wanted to document the night sky. This is 12:07 am.

And this is 1:17 am.

As Friday morning dawned, or, I should say, as we removed the sleep masks and drew back the blackout curtains, we prepared to leave. We hauled all our suitcases down the four floors of Pall's attic to the streets, where we then caught a bus to Keflavik airport. From there is was a seven hour flight to Seattle, then a few more hours to Sacramento. Jon's bike bag, once again, went missing enroute, so we filled out paperwork and then shuttled to a hotel and fell right to sleep. 

The next morning we woke up to a sunny August day in California's agricultural heartland, ditching the sweaters and boots for tank tops and sandals. We ate too much at the free breakfast, hung out by the hotel pool, and killed just enough time to get word from the airline that the bike bag had arrived in Sacramento. After retrieving the 4Runner from its unconventional long term parking spot (a story in itself- ask me sometime), we went to get the bike. Finally we went back to Pat's Place for Cats to pick up our precious Odessa. Watch to final video here to understand why we do not travel with her.

Me, winning at the Hampton Inn breakfast buffet.

Axel and I sampling the offerings of the Natomas Hampton Inn while Jon goes to get the 4Runner.

Here is us driving back to Nevada City. This is why we cannot travel with Odessa. Sheesh.

She is very mellow once back home, though.

Later that night we brought pizza over to Mimi's house and dined with her and Jon's sister Valerie and family. It was a wild and woolly seven weeks (literally) but we are happy to be home.

Comments

Unknown said…
I will see if it lets me post. It seldom does. Love the blog. Mom