Reykjavik

For our first day we decided to start off with the free walking tour of Reykjavik. We've done several of the free walking tours and they are generally good, because the guides rely on tips. There is not much to see in Reykjavik compared to the major European cities, since most of it is relatively new. Supposedly it was founded in Viking times, but our guide showed us a drawing of it as it was in 1850, and there was a church, a store, a pier and about 30 houses, that's it. Even now the population is only about 200,000.

Tour group in front of the parliament building
Viking founder of Reykjavik
Look at the angle of the satellite dish. Very strange.

Although there wasn't much to see, the guide was good at telling stories and keeping us entertained. At one point he mentioned there is a penis museum in Reykjavik. That immediately became somewhere Yanmei wanted to go see. 🙂

It started to rain just as we finished the tour, so we headed back to the hotel. We tested a bit in the hotel and the rain stopped and it started to clear up, so I suggested we go on a whale watching tour.

Minke whale
Dolphins jumping

The tour was successful we saw several minke whales and some dolphins. At one point a whale came up right next to the boat, although I didn't get a picture of that. It is pretty difficult to capture good pictures because they only surface for about a second and then go back under, so I have several photos of recently disturbed water, ha ha.

Bird caught a fish
The coastline was very beautiful, this picture doesn't fully capture it.
Spinal disc of a minke whale

As we headed back, the clouds seemed to be clearing, so I thought it would make for a good sunset. I came back down to the shoreline at about 11:30pm to catch the 11:55pm sunset. Unfortunately there were too many clouds on the horizon, so it wasn't great. The ocean was remarkably still.

Midnight, 5 minutes after sunset.

-David

 

 

Winter is coming

At long last our time in mainland Europe is come to an end. But I had one more thing I wanted to do before leaving Denmark: have a danish.

From the Andersen bakery near Tivoli Gardens. Delicious.

Then it was off to Iceland. It is about a 3 hour flight to Reykjavik from Copenhagen.

Disembarking in Iceland

Of course it is summer, not winter in Iceland. The temperature was about 13C when we arrived. By the time we got to our hotel and had dinner it was raining, so we didn't go out to do anything. The great thing about this time of year is it never gets dark, so you can go see things late at night, if you feel like it. Sunset was at 11:55pm, so no official midnight sun, but then it becomes dusk and never gets any darker, because the sun comes back up at 3:00am. The only drawback is no chance to see the famous northern lights at this time of the year.

-David