Return Flight Back Home: From Iceland to America
We felt a bit like Leif Ericsson who had made the first historic voyage from Iceland to the New World in 999 AD as we boarded our WOW Airlines aircraft for our return flight home. Thankfully, our flight was unaffected by whatever weather
conditions were going on in the eastern United States. We went through travel formalities
and I had the unique distinction, after 35 years of flying, of being the first
person to enter a waiting aircraft! Another travel first for me! These simple
pleasures often delight me during my travels.
The flight was very pleasant and uneventful. We thought the service was superb. Below us
(I had a window seat), the landscape changed magically. Two hours after leaving Iceland, the thickly
snow-covered expanses of Greenland appeared before us. We passed by mountains, rivers and lakes that
appeared like a frozen moon surface below us. Just as we were leaving the
coast, we saw the beautiful fjords of the country. Although we hadn’t landed in
Greenland, we saw a great deal of it from a bird’s eye perspective. Incredible! A little later, we were flying
over the northern reaches of Canada—another icy Tundra region.
By 5. 15 pm, we were descending into Newark airport but not before we were offered spectacular views of the island of Manhattan that had been newly cleaned by a nor'easter. We caught the slanting rays of the setting sun over New York City's skyscrapers as, at 5.25pm, we landed at Newark Airport and discovered that
clocks had sprung forward in America. We
adjusted our watches and stepped out into the airport, cleared immigration in
seconds (as we have Global Network clearance), found a shuttle to take us to
Grand Central Station and then took the Metro-North train home. My brother Roger was waiting to receive us in
his car at Southport station from where he dropped us home in less than five
minutes.
Conclusion:
Visiting Incredible Iceland in the winter is an experience
we will contemplate for a very long time to come. In a land that is known for
extreme cold, we had the distinction of driving through a blinding snowstorm
and living to tell the tale. The heavens
obligingly lit up for us and we saw the Northern Lights—the very reason for our
trip. We were drenched under waterfalls, including mysterious hidden ones, that
offered sheer exhilaration. We left our footsteps on millennia-old glaciers
during energetic hikes. We penetrated the interior of hidden caves that were composed
of and draped entirely in crystal-like transparent ice. We dunked ourselves in
the jade-green waters of the Blue Lagoon where the sulphur-rich vapors of a
geo-thermal hot pot relaxed us completely.
We saw tall spouting geysers, blue-hued glaciers, black sand beaches,
natural rock formations, frozen lakes and mile upon mile of wintry wasteland
upon which no human being dwelled. We took in the feats of amazing architecture
created by human hands in Modernist Scandinavian style—from towering church
steeples to jewel-like concert halls, from pearl-shaped domes that disguised
humble water tanks to traditional wooden houses and basalt Parliament buildings.
In terms of wild life, we saw native horses, Arctic terns, plovers and seagulls.
We tasted local delicacies such as grilled lamb and local hot dogs, Skyr (Icelandic yogurt), ice-cream and local chocolate bars. We chatted with Icelanders in bars,
restaurants and in farms and fields when we asked for directions. We found them
to be welcoming and extremely helpful.
In all our travels, there are a few images that stand out
and which we recall every time we think of that country. Iceland offered us so many that it is impossible
to choose the main one.
Thanks, as always, for reading my journal and for following
my blog posts. If I can inspire you to undertake such adventures, my main
objective would have been fully vindicated.
May the road reach out to greet you always….
1 comment:
Hi Rochelle - wonderful reads, and a great summary - now I know where to go should I ever get to visit Iceland ... cheers Hilary
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