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  • It’s dotted with over one hundred volcanoes,

  • yet is home to Europe’s largest glacier;

  • it’s perched on the edge of the arctic circle,

  • yet is warmed by the Gulf Stream,…Iceland truly is,

  • the Land of Fire and Ice. It’s also the land, of story.

  • The marks of human hands are few and far between on this windswept land.

  • Footprints are quickly reclaimed, but stories,…linger forever.

  • Such is the sheer force and beauty of this place that Viking warriors

  • have been transformed into poets, and family stories into epic sagas.

  • When Norseman, Ingólfur Arnarson,

  • first caught sight of these shores over eleven-hundred years ago,

  • he cast the wooden seat pillars of his chieftain throne overboard

  • and vowed to build his farm wherever they washed up.

  • Three years later the pillars were found and a settlement was born.

  • That settlement became Reykjavik, Iceland’s capital,

  • a city two-thirds of Icelanders now call home.

  • With a population of only 300,000,

  • Iceland can feel like the most isolated place on earth,

  • yet Reykjavik is only a three-hour flight from London,

  • and just under six from New York.

  • Reykjavik is one of those places that’s not sure if it’s big town,

  • or a small city, and therein lays its charm.

  • It’s relaxed and welcoming,

  • yet possesses a fierce creativity

  • and cultural life that holds its own against other European capitals.

  • Most buildings here are a response to the natural environment,…

  • simple and low, to beat the North Atlantic winds,…colourful,

  • to brighten the spirits through the long dark winters.

  • Yet there's grand civic architecture here too,

  • buildings truly inspired by Iceland’s natural beauty.

  • Like a spire from a fairy tale ice-castle,

  • the soaring central tower of Hallgrímskirkja watches over all of Reykjavik.

  • Designed to mirror the geometric shapes of ancient lava flows,

  • few other churches in the world so honour the natural world.

  • Iceland’s conference and concert center,

  • Harpa, is designed to reflect the city’s sky,

  • harbour and cultural energy.

  • Once again,

  • the island’s dramatic geologic formations are honoured here,

  • as well as the incredible winter spectacle of the Northern Lights.

  • Icelanders value their heritage buildings too.

  • When Reykjavík modernised in the mid-twentieth century,

  • dozens of the city’s older buildings were relocated to the last of the city’s farms.

  • Today, Arbaejarsafn, serves as a museum which allows visitors

  • to walk through the pages of earlier times. While at the National Museum of Iceland,

  • take a voyage through Icelandic history,

  • from the present day, back to the Settlement Age.

  • Wherever you step in this city,

  • nature beckons you,…over windswept waters, across the mountains,

  • and into limitless horizons.

  • Many of the country’s most popular sights are within easy reach of Reykjavík,

  • often by public transport.

  • Immerse yourself in the spirit of Iceland,

  • at the Blue Lagoon. Here, and at hundreds of volcanic baths across the island,

  • locals come to soak in the healing thermal waters,

  • share gossip with neighbours, and even conduct business meetings.

  • Not far from Reykjavík is an area known as The Golden Circle,

  • which encompasses three of Iceland’s greatest natural wonders.

  • Just 30 miles from the capital, is Thingvellir National Park,

  • considered the country’s heart and soul.

  • Here, you can actually walk between the tectonic plates of North America and Europe,

  • that have been drifting apart for millennia.

  • Stand upon the shore of the country’s largest lake,

  • wander the grass covered lava flows

  • and imagine the clans who gathered here for Iceland’s open air parliament,

  • for two weeks each year, for over 800 years.

  • Also in the Golden Circle,

  • experience a boiling cauldron of hissing steam vents and belching mud pools,

  • at the Geysir Geothermal Field.

  • The Great Geysir itself has been quiet in recent years,

  • but nearby, it’s little brother Strokkur, still puts on a show,

  • thrusting water into the heavens every 10 minutes.

  • If there’s one natural wonder in The Golden Circle that outshines them all, it’s Gullfoss.

  • Early last century, the waterfall was threatened by a hydroelectric project,

  • until a local farmer’s daughter walked barefoot to Reykjavik

  • and threatened to throw herself from the falls unless the project was stopped.

  • Today, that woman is regarded as Iceland’s first environmentalist,

  • and The Golden Falls have been protected, forever.

  • For many visitors, their Icelandic story continues

  • no further than Reykjavik and The Golden Circle,

  • which is a shame, because the further you roam, the greater the adventure.

  • Iceland’s main ring road circles the entire island,

  • stringing together an endless series of epic landscapes and tales.

  • An hour and a half’s drive east from Reykjavik

  • is one of the world’s most beautiful waterfalls,

  • Seljalandsfoss.

  • Follow the trail behind a 200 foot veil of pure glacial water,

  • where throughout the ages, adventurers have come to pause,

  • and breathe in the mists of this sacred place.

  • Drive another 18 miles east, to Skógafoss, where according to folklore,

  • a Viking buried his chest of gold behind the falls. Years later,

  • a local boy found the chest and attempted to wrench it from it’s hiding place,

  • only to tear off its handle before the chest vanished again.

  • On sunny days the falls create a double rainbow, a treasure in itself.

  • Continue eastward towards Vík, the southern-most village in the country.

  • Here wedged between the mountains and the sea

  • lie some of Iceland’s most dramatic landscapes, weather, and legends.

  • Explore the basalt sands of Black Beach,

  • considered one of the most beautiful non-tropical beaches in the world.

  • Just offshore rise the basalt sea stacks of Reynisdrangar.

  • Locals say the formations are the remains of two trolls heading out to sea,

  • who, when caught by the rising sun were frozen in the morning light.

  • The shorelines here are made up of otherworldly rock formations and caves,

  • likelsanefshellir,

  • said to be a monster’s lair until a landslide sealed the entrance only a century ago.

  • Hike across the natural arch of Dyrholaey and sit surrounded by puffins.

  • While below, waves that have travelled uninterrupted,

  • all the way from Antarctica, end their journey against Iceland’s most southerly point.

  • Follow the ring road for another two hours,

  • into the ethereal light ofkulsárlón Lake.

  • Here, at the tongue of Vatnajokull, Europe’s largest glacier,

  • icebergs break away and float for years,

  • melting down until they are small enough to tumble out to sea.

  • A magnet for photographers and filmmakers,

  • kulsárlón has been the setting for modern day legends,

  • like James Bond, Batman, and Lara Croft.

  • From the wild, windswept shores of the East Coast to the volcanic wonders of the north,

  • Iceland’s ring road offers one jewel after another,

  • all strung together with mile upon mile of absolute solitude.

  • Stand before the northern horseshoe falls of Selfoss.

  • Then just downstream,

  • feel the earth rumble beneath your boots at Europe’s mightiest waterfall,

  • Dettifoss, who’s plume can be seen over half a mile away.

  • Nearby the Myvatn region awaits, whose centerpiece is a tranquil lake,

  • surrounded by nature in all its violent beauty.

  • Take a careful walk through the boiling landscape of Namafjall.

  • Lose yourself amid the lava pillars and dark castles of Dimmuborgir,

  • the place where Satan is said to have landed when God cast him from Heaven.

  • Then, peer into the caldera of Krafla Volcano,

  • and witness the incredible geothermal power that resides just beneath the ice.

  • Just to the west of Myvatn,

  • is a waterfall forever linked to a turning point in Iceland’s epic narrative.

  • When civil war threatened to tear the island in two in the 10th century,

  • Iceland’s law speaker united the country under one faith,

  • Christianity. In a symbolic act of conversion,

  • the chieftain hurled his pagan totems off the falls,

  • which have been known as Godafoss, the waterfall of the gods, ever since.

  • After a few days on the road,

  • the tiny city of Akureyri appears like an arctic oasis.

  • Known as the Capital of the North,

  • Akureyri is the perfect place to warm up and enjoy some comfort and culture,

  • before heading off into the wilds again.

  • There are some stories we never want to end, that we never want to put down, but rest assured,

  • this, is only an introduction. In Iceland, every side road,

  • every path is a story waiting to unfold. From the vast interior,

  • to the West Fjords, each untouched beach and windswept plain is an unwritten page.

  • So come, and live your own Icelandic story, it’s one youll keep telling, for the

  • rest of your days.

It’s dotted with over one hundred volcanoes,

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