Archives: Destinations

  • January 31, 2026
    Fjaðrárgljúfur is a narrow, deeply incised canyon where water has carved precision into volcanic rock over millennia. Cut by the…
  • January 31, 2026
    Fauskavík, also known as Stapavík, is a quiet bay on Iceland’s remote east coast where erosion, rock structure, and open…
  • January 31, 2026
    Fjallsárlón is a compact glacial lagoon where ice, water, and time operate at a human-readable scale. Formed at the margin…
  • Studlagil canyon

    January 31, 2026
    Stuðlagil is a basalt column canyon where form, flow, and timing intersect with unusual clarity. Carved by the Jökla river…
  • Axlafoss waterfall

    January 31, 2026
    Axlafoss is a quiet but structurally precise waterfall in Iceland’s southern Highlands, where meltwater from glacial margins descends over volcanic…
  • January 31, 2026
    Skógar Museum is a concentrated record of Icelandic rural life, technological transition, and cultural continuity, set at the boundary between…
  • January 26, 2026
    Svínafellsjökull is an outlet glacier where Iceland’s ice dynamics are exposed at close range. Descending from Vatnajökull into a confined…
  • Kerlingafjöll geothermal area

    January 26, 2026
    Kerlingarfjöll is a highland mountain range where Iceland’s internal heat is exposed with unusual clarity. Rhyolite peaks, persistent snowfields, and…
  • January 26, 2026
    Langisjór is one of the Highlands’ clearest statements of Icelandic contrast: sapphire water laid into black volcanic terrain, with long…
  • Mt. Mælifell

    January 26, 2026
    Mælifell rises alone from the black sands of Iceland’s southern Highlands, a conical volcano rendered unmistakable by the green mantle…