On Thursday morning, we were picked up by “Hershey” (he knew we
wouldn’t be able to pronounce his Icelandic name so he, taking pity on us poor
Americans, gave us a name we could remember), who took us on a mystery tour –
around the University of Iceland, by Perlan, or the Pearl (a mirrored spherical
dome that sits on top of a circle of six large - 4 million liters each - geothermal
water containers, all situated on top of a hill so you can see it from
everywhere – and revolving restaurant we’ll have to visit next time), to the
house along the water where Reagan and Gorbachev met in 1986…
What a view! If that wind had
reversed itself, Hershey and I would have been just a greasy slick on the rocks
far below. Kathie, of course, stood well
back from the edge of the cliff – probably nibbling on her fingernails ‘til we
removed ourselves to a safer location.
Wherever we went in Iceland, I was struck by how close the sky
seemed. Surely this was an optical
illusion, perhaps due to the fact that there are very few trees and it seems
like you can see forever. Phenomenal.
Hershey dropped us at the Blue Lagoon, where we soaked/floated about
for an hour in the geothermal seawater with a couple hundred of our closest
friends.
Along the edge of the pool, there are spots where you can scoop up some
white silica mud to paint on your face.
When you wash it off, your skin is ultra soft. Honest, everyone does it – not just the kids. There is even a psoriasis treatment place
next door. Cool place. (Kath, I read in the guidebook that the best
time to visit is on a winter night when you can watch the Northern Lights while
icicles form in your hair. Let’s try it,
ok?)
On the way back home that afternoon, our driver (not Hershey) dropped
us off at Geysir for dinner. It was so
good, and the wait staff were very nice.
Highly recommend, Joan!
Let's go back. Maybe take an apartment for a month.
ReplyDeleteAnd we were so hungry.
ReplyDeleteDitto to both those comments! Or maybe 3 weeks in June and one week in the winter!
ReplyDelete