Unsettled on The Snaefellsnes

As someone who promotes things for a living, something about visiting Iceland inspired slogans. “Iceland. S’neat.” Hard to translate though. “Iceland. Full of Surprises.” Maybe I was still in my work brain, or maybe Iceland makes you want to tell everybody about Iceland. And we’d only just arrived that morning.   

Outside, 6 am, 25°F, plus biting winds. I read that we could probably go without a 4x4, but we rented one just in case, since, as everyone said: It’s Iceland. You never know what will happen! “Iceland. What Happens Next?”  

Blue Lagoon

Blue Lagoon

After a restorative soak in the surreal hot springs of the Blue Lagoon, we drove to Stykkisholmur, a colorful fishing town on the north coast of the Snaefellsnes Peninsula, about 3 hours northwest of Reykjavik. I took to calling it the Snuffalupagus Peninsula, after Big Bird’s imaginary friend/wooly mammoth. Like Snuffy, it's hard to believe Iceland is real. 

Even at the tail end of winter, Iceland isn’t a bargain. We needed a place to sleep, and while there were numerous small hotels and guest houses in Stykkisholmur, most weren’t open and what was open was pricey. After a hefty bowl of cauliflower soup at Nesbraud, we decided to try our luck in Olafsvik, one hour away and just a few miles from the border of the Snaefellsjokul National Park.  

The blacktop snaked past lava fields, frozen waterfalls and lumbering black-green hills. Ice-covered peaks floated like ghosts in the distance. It felt like another planet. “Iceland. Earth, Only Better.”  

Norwegians – Vikings – settled Iceland in about 930 a.d., braving rough seas for a new home in an inhospitable, impassable land. Remains of abandoned settlements run the border of the black sand coastline. Dotted lines of stones mark where lives once were. Crumbling door frames stand still, thresholds from then to now, from was to is.  

A sign said we were passing through the Berserkjahraun lava field. Berserk! Ha! I had to look it up. The name relates back to the Eyrbyggia Saga, an Icelandic favorite. The sagas aren’t so much myths as local legends, grounded in real people, places and events.  

In the Eyrbyggia Saga, a landowner hired two gigantic, powerful men, Berserkers (the most violent of the Vikings, which is saying something), to work on his land. He soon learned that one of them was enamored of his only daughter. To avoid marrying her off to a madman, he sent the Berserkers on an impossible mission: clear a path through the lava field so he could get to his brother’s property. They did the job in record time, and the landowner insisted they rest and relax in the sauna. Once in the underground sweatbox, in came a flood of boiling water, killing the Berserkers in gruesome fashion. Sounds fantastic, but the bodies of two enormous men were recovered on that land, and the path remains, now a national monument.  

This weird, wild landscape lends itself to implausible scenes and oversized stories. For example, something like 54% of Icelanders believe in elves. Construction projects have been suspended rather than disturb the elves and suffer their wrath. (What elfin wrath looks like, I don’t know. I’m thinking tea kettles shattering, slipping in the tub, terrible tinnitus from nonstop screeching.) Seems silly - until you’re here. All the nooks and crannies in the earth, little lava caves. If elves are going to live anywhere, it’s Iceland. “Iceland. Because Elves.” 

When we arrived in Olafsvik around 7 pm, the one hotel we'd found was closed. A handwritten sign on the door said they’d be open tomorrow. That’s what you get for visiting Iceland in the shoulder season. Luckily, Hraun, the only restaurant in town (the name means “lava”), was open for dinner. Over two amazing cheeseburgers and fries with ‘Icelandic dipping sauce’ (ketchup + mayonnaise), we asked our waitress for help.  

She handed us a cocktail napkin with the word HADID, like a secret password, or the name of a dragon we needed to slay before we could check in. I remembered passing it now, maybe 100 yards up the road. A shabby beige block of concrete with storefronts on the street side. Leery, we headed over there and dragged our bags up a flight of wooden stairs on the back of the building. Inside . . . surprise! A bright, new, white-on-white reception area and dining room, decorated with quirky tchotchkes and art. “Iceland. Who Knew?” 

Our tiny room sat on the corner of the building, with two large salt-worn windows, and below, a small stretch of black sand beach. Great bedding (they know their down, the Icelanders) and the sound of the ocean put us right to sleep.  

The next morning, it was snowing. A lot. No snow removal on the two-lane road. We shrugged our shoulders, put our faith in our 4x4, and forged ahead.  

The empty road wound through volcanic rock smothered in acid olive green moss, rolling carpets of golden hay, and patches of snow. All day the weather played games – blasting winds, mist, rain, freezing rain, snow, sunny spots. Just when you’d get used to it – or couldn’t stand it anymore – the weather would change. “Iceland. Wait For It “  

Low clouds and fog hid the top of Snaefellsjokull, the glacier-covered volcano looming in the center of the national park bearing its name. A stocky orange lighthouse flashed on the landscape. Seabirds swarmed glistening basalt cliffs. Hundreds of common murre, black birds with white bellies, bobbed like little boats on the sheer green water below. We crawled into a stone shelter to drink pure, frigid water from an ancient well. 

Bringing everything full circle, our last meal on the Snaefellsnes: voluminous bowls of mushroom soup at Primus Kaffi. Charming and bright, the café sits on a hill overlooking the ocean. A pretty, empty church and a sailors’ graveyard mark the property. The church seemed abandoned, but through the windows, satin upholstered pews and worn mass books stood ready for services. (cue spooky music)         

“Iceland. Magic Lives Here.” “Iceland. Believe.” Take your pick. It’s all true. 

Kuang Si Falls

Kuang Si Falls, Laos

Kuang Si Falls, Laos

A 45-minute tuk-tuk ride to Kuang Si Falls wound through the verdant, rolling mountains of the Laotian countryside. Water buffalo, rice paddies dotted with the occasional straw hat, tipped down. Every so often, a town, if you can call it that -- a handful of open air shacks selling basic goods. Over twisty roads and rickety wood bridges, kids in uniforms walked home from school, or rode double on bikes three sizes too big. Moto drivers wearing surgical masks sped by, their jackets turned backward to ward off dust.

The electric aqua waterfall appeared magical. Like if you drank from it, you might live forever.  I could go up or down. I opted for up. Path or hike. I opted for hike, a steep stretch of roots and packed red mud ‘steps’ right alongside the waterfall. At the top of the falls, I waded into the cool water to a wooden fence where you could put your head almost over the edge. As I crossed the lagoon to make my way back down, I saw another sign tucked off to the side: cave and fresh spring, 3 km. So I opted instead for the road less traveled.

No more signs, no one on the path, just me and hundreds of swirling butterflies. No idea if I was going the right way or not. After walking about 25 minutes, a barefoot Lao man and his dog approached, on the other side of a funny little gate, which was locked, and a strange low fence, with barbed wire underneath, no more than a foot off the ground. He indicated I was going the right way by pointing, nodding and gesturing with his head, since we didn’t share a language. The road to the right was what I wanted. Just step over the fence. I wondered if I'd fallen through a crack in time. Alice in WonderLao.


A little while after making the turn, I saw a couple up ahead, which made me feel more secure. I caught up to them just about to enter the cave. They were sitting on a wooden bench, getting water and small bananas from the cave keeper. For 10,000 kip, I got my own mini banana, water and a small, stubby flashlight.

At the entrance, a foot-tall seated gold Buddha, and then lots of little Buddha statues tucked in crannies in the small, low-ceilinged, happily bat-free cave. Thank god for the young Belgian couple, since my flashlight didn’t work. I followed their light in the dark, and hit my head three times before they reminded me that my phone had a light on it. Right. I blame my lapse in brain function on the humidity. 

Cave done, now on to the spring - a surreal, paradisiacal pool surrounded by lush jungle. The spring attendant's two little girls played on a rope swing, near a few picnic tables, and they even sold a few sundries. A big beer for the Belgians, more water for me. After a swim to cool off and de-sweat, I said goodbye and rushed back the same "3 km" (more like 6 km - the sign grossly understated the distance, we'd decided), hustling to meet my tuk-tuk driver to return to Luang Prabang. Since I was leaving for Thailand the next day, I hoped to still catch the sunset in town from the top of Mount Phou Si. I got back just barely in time. After another sprint up a few hundred steps to the temple, I joined the crowd gathered for the photo op. All fell quiet as the the sun sank behind the mountains, an orange glow rippling out across the Mekong. 

Sunset over the Mekong River, Luang Prabang

Sunset over the Mekong River, Luang Prabang