Page 47 - AAA Magazine – AAA Ohio Auto Club – May 2019
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photo: iStock/Boyloso
photo: iStock/Leonid Andronov
photo: Shutterstock/ Andrzej Fryda
Seljalandsfoss waterfall
After spending the night in Reykjavik, you will awake to take on the Golden Circle, a 190-mile journey to
visit many of Iceland’s famous natural works of art. Thingvellir National Park is where Icelanders first convened in 930 to create the world’s first parliament. Besides its historical aspect, the park has scenic beauty with its rift valley that marks the peak of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the boundary between the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates.
Thingvellir was named a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2004. Next on the circle are the geothermal fields of Haukadalur, home to the geysers Geysir and Strokkur. While Geysir has been dormant for years, Strokkur erupts regularly, putting on quite the show. Your final stop along the circle will be the Gullfoss, Icelandic for Golden Falls. Along the Hvítá River, it is unique because it is a two-step waterfall with the first step being around 36 feet and the next step being about 69 feet. But the most impressive waterfall is the next stop. Seljalandsfoss, along the Seljalands River,
Vík í Mýrdal
drops 197 feet, but the coolest thing about it is there
is a cave that visitors can enter and walk behind the waterfall, making it one of the country’s most visited and photographed locations.
Your journey continues to Vik, where you will have dinner, continue your quest for the aurora borealis (or see them again if you were lucky enough to see them the first night) and retire for the evening.
For the next two days, Vik (officially Vík í Mýrdal, not to be confused with Vik, Norway) will be your home base. Your first visit from here will be to the Eyjafjallajökull Volcano Visitor Centre, home to an ice-cap covered volcano. When it last erupted in 2010, it caused flooding and evacuations in Iceland and the volcanic it spewed into the atmosphere caused airline traffic to come to a halt for more than six days. At the Visitor Centre, you will learn about how a family struggled through this ordeal.
At the Skogar Folk Museum, you will finally get some time indoors as you delve into the history and culture of the Icelandic people. The museum will celebrate its 70th anniversary later this year and had been curated by its founder until 2013. It houses more than 15,000 artifacts covering fishing, agriculture, natural history and furnishing and crafts. The main feature of the fishing section is an eight-oared fishing boat built in 1855 and used until 1946.
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Reykjavik
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