Up at 7.30 am, down to a decent continental breakfast including some very tasty pickled herring and outside ready for our transport at 8.30. It's still pitch dark.
We have booked the Golden Circle tour. The trip is named after the Gullfoss (means golden waterfall, cf. the name Force for a waterfall in NE England with Foss here) however I am getting ahead of myself. The first place we will look at is the reason why Iceland exists, the collision of two tectonic plates. The North American and Eurasian plates headbutt here. The result is volcanoes, earthquakes and Geothermal activity. We are generally used to looking at landscapes that are the result of fluvial activity, so we see v shaped valleys, rounded stones and gentle curves. Contrast that with what we see, fractured sharp rocks, straight lines with water pooling. This is a rift valley with about three and a half miles between the plates. No wonder it is so alien to us and often described as lunar.
It has taken an hour to reach our first sight of the rift valley. Now about 9.30 and the sun still isn't up. It, like me seems to rise with great reluctance.
It's on its way. The island you can see in the lake is a volcano cone. We are about 400 metres above sea and look at the weather. All the permanent human habitation on the Island is below 300m. Iceland sits between the 64th and 66th parallels. The Artic circle is 66 and a third parallel.
At last the sun breaks through. Today is going to be beautiful weather. We are very lucky.
Here I hope you can see the kind of landscape that I was describing. We are standing on the edge of the North American tectonic plate and looking across the rift valley. You might be able to make out some buildings in the middle distance. A chapel and about three houses. This is the old Althing (parliament) on the original 930 site. It's now in Reykjavik.
Here we are on the other side of the valley. We are heading on next to a Geothermal site with the original geyser that gave the name to all others.
There she blows!
It reaches the height of about 30 metres. On now to the Gullfoss. This is a two step waterfall on a river which is glacial melt water. This is why it is much more impressive in the summer than the winter.
It is pretty impressive however when harnessed in ice as the Icelanders put it.
So we move on to another waterfall, this one called Faxifoss
As you can see the sun is off for an early night. It takes at least another half an hour before we see this view.
We get back to the hotel at about 5.30 just time for a short break and food before we have to leave for the Northern lights trip. Always tenuous at best, this trip,a bit like whale watching only even less predictable. This night proved to be very frustrating as we moved from place to place with no luck. In fact we repeated the exact circuit that we had done earlier in the day and didn't get back till 2.30 am. What did we actually see? Well......
This is not what we actually saw. It was more like this.
We did actually see the lights but they were a faint green rim in the sky with a slightly brighter lump. They only lasted a few minutes and then disappeared. One clearly needs a more sophisticated camera than my tablet to get any image. I gather most of the pictures that you see are in fact photoshot. I'm not sure it was worth the seven hours investment of time. Still, we can tell the grandchildren .........
I would like to offer you a selection of photos in a gallery taken by Helen and me with my bridge camera which gives you sharper focus and much greater flexibility.
The sun is high enough to light the mountain range where the glacial water comes from.
The double step of the Gullfoss.
Rainbow visible in the water vapour from the falls.
A mini geyser bubbling away.
Is my tiny hand frozen in swan lake? (spotted and snapped by Helen)
Faxifoss and the last of the afternoon sun.
The salmon ladder made in 1966.
A cheeky town dwelling fieldfare.
There is also something organically insectivorous about this building
The buildings are the old Althing, Icelandic parliament'
Sun nearly up
At last some bright light, but hardly any heat.