1 - The South Coast
This was my first visit to Iceland, Europe's most sparsely populated country. My previous lack of contact with the island nation seemed surprising, given that I had gazed down on it from above during so many transatlantic crossings, to the point where it had become a long-haul milestone that was simultaneously familiar and unknown. And despite the fact that direct air links from Glasgow had existed for many years, recently supplemented by a convenient easyJet service from Edinburgh, I was arriving on a British Airways service from London. This is because it was a joint trip with my friend Bruce, using an American Express companion voucher in conjunction with an avios redemption.
Wednesday 20 September
After arriving from London and picking up our rental car in miserable weather, we set out on the 310km drive along the south-coast road to our first night-stop in the small village of Kirkjubæjarklaustur. Poor weather limited the number of stops initially, but conditions brightened up as we got closer to our destination and the largely deserted roads were a delight to drive.
Today's plan involved retracing the south-coast route almost as far as Sellfoss before turning inland towards Gullfoss. (The second part of the drive is covered on the 'Golden Circle' page.) Better weather today meant that more stops were possible on the coastal drive.
Base: Icelandair Hotel Klaustur
Linked reports from same trip: |
Bristol |
Swindon: GWR 'Steam' |
Iceland: Golden Circle |
Iceland: Reykjavik |