I'm never very inspired in February (who is! Well, maybe people in the southern hemisphere, where it's still summer...) but I did go on a really nice day trip with Óðinn recently "east of the mountain" or
austur fyrir fjall. I'll wager to say that all of you who have been here have taken the same drive, as it's the southern part of the
Golden Circle loop that takes you out to Gullfoss and Geysir, as well as the only road getting you to the south and east coasts.
After just a short drive out of town we passed through
Hveragerði (Hot Spring 'Paddock') and went farther into the valley to Reykjadalur (
Smoke Valley.) It totally lives up to its name, with fumaroles, hot pits filled with bubbly grey mud, and steaming rivers creating permanent mist columns rising from the earth. People came to this area to tap into the free geothermal heat, and by 1930 the first greenhouse was built.
I remember that a trip to Hveragerði for ice cream was a mandatory thing back when our family came to visit, as in pretty much every close relative with a car proposed day trip to
Eden, a hothouse nursery with a gift shop and restaurant attached. They were famous for having a
banana tree and of course soft serve ice cream with chocolate dip for ennui-laden visitors from the Capital region. Unfortunately,
Eden burned down in 2011, after a bankruptcy (that
never happens
here, am I
right?)
Though the
hothouse flower market is going strong here in Iceland, and we have some excellent locally grown
greens and
vegetables, greenhouses do
not use free electricity. It is costly to keep a greenhouse running 24/7, and
agriculture is not subsidized by the government the way the aluminum industry is. The result is sights like the one above, abandoned dreams that litter the geothermally-active landscape.
Visitors, past and future, and lovers of our country, please continue to put pressure on our government to step into the Now and become ecologically sustainable and renewable. We have
all the resources, and none of the excuses that make this more difficult in other regions. You can help by choosing locally-grown foods and asking your hotels and guesthouses for info on eco-friendly travel around the island (
this website looks interesting, and here are some
great resources to look over.)
We are having a passionate love affair with our tourism economy right now, but to truly make it last, and to make your trip here have impact, put pressure with your pocketbook in all the right places. That way, maybe we can actually live up to our reputation as one of the most
eco-friendly countries in the world.**Note that we are at #14 for 2014 on this EPI list, down from #1 in 2011...