Day 4. Wow, almost
seems longer than that, but I’m not ready to come home quite yet – more places
to visit and photos to take!
That said, Hӧfn was my farthest east planned
destination, so it was time to head back west towards Reykjavik and then up to
the Snaefellsnes peninsula (say that name three times fast). But first, I wanted to go back to Vestrahorn
to shoot it again during better lighting.
The weather…especially the clouds above the mountain…were nearly
perfect, and I think I captured some pretty decent images of this magnificent
mountain.
I wanted to get as far west as I could but I had a couple
destinations along the way that I wanted to hit. One of these was another waterfall,
Svartifoss (sounds like a candy, doesn’t it?).
Waterfalls are so ubiquitous in Iceland.
In fact, it is estimated that Iceland has over 10,000 waterfalls, most
of them unnamed. You can frequently see
them in the mountains, one right after another, as you drive along the main
ring road. The net result is that people
often ignore the lesser waterfalls, which anywhere else would be pretty significant. Svartifoss is one such
example since it feeds at least two other decent sized waterfalls that folks just seemed to walk by.
Getting to Svartifoss is no easy chore. It is a 1.4 km (~1 mile) hike, mostly uphill
with grades of 10% or better. Add my
camera backpack and tripod and you get a nice workout. I was definitely sweating by the time I got
there, but it was worth the effort.
Svartifoss is spectacular. One
reason for this is because it is surrounded by dark, basalt columns that make
it not only unusual, but pretty cool looking.
It took a while to get the shot I wanted because people were climbing
the rocks so they could get their picture taken. One girl in particular (I think she was
French), took off her jacket and was up there for a considerable time doing all
kinds of “cute” poses. Annoying! (Don’t they realize I am waiting to take an
award-winning photograph!)
I made it back to Vik and checked in the same campground I
had stayed at the first night. The skies
turned cloudy by the time I arrived and rain is predicted. In fact, it is raining as of this writing
(since it is actually morning of Day 5).
I am not quite sure yet what I am going to do o Day 5. I could drive on, but there a couple places
in the area I want to visit, and I hoping the rain will at lest lighten a
bit. I heard say it was supposed
to. And, if you can trust the forecasts, I still have some decent shooting weather ahead me. Either way, resilience, fortitude, and gratefulness,
right?
Till next time, peace to all!
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Vestrahorn from the black sand dunes. Aren’t the clouds, which characteristically
encircle the peaks, amazing!?
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Vestrahorn again, this time in black & white and from the
dried up lake at its base. Oddly, there
are these large rocks randomly located on the lake bed, making for some
interesting foregrounds.
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Mossy lava field, which extends as far as the eye can
see. The moss, which hasn’t yet turned
its characteristic bright green, takes centuries to grow and is ecologically
sensitive (despite the music video that Justin Bieber did here some
years ago).
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And finally, Svartifoss in black & white! You can the basalt columns on either side of
the waterfall itself.
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