Iceland Photography Trip
For a while now I’ve been toying with the idea of running landscape workshops in Iceland.
Now you know by now I NEVER try and sell anything I haven’t ‘done’ myself first, so the last Monday of February saw myself and Richard boarding an Easyjet Airbus at Manchester bound for Keflavik airport for something of a recce.
We had teamed up with the ‘oh-so-nice’ Malcolm Stott, a super guy who’s been traveling to Iceland as a naturalist and tour guide for nearly 50 years – what he doesn’t know about Iceland isn’t worth knowing!
Poor man – he had absolutely NO DAMNED IDEA what he’d let himself in for agreeing to take me and mini-me on a whistle-stop tour of the land of fire and ice.
With all my experience in Norway I thought I’d got a pretty good idea what to expect – how freaking wrong can one be!
We piled into Keflavik while it was still daylight, got picked up by Malcom in our hired Toyota 4×4 and headed straight for the Northern Light Inn where we’d be staying for one night before heading up to the North east region and Myvatn.
Cracking hotel – and just 2 hours after Easyjets rubber hit the Icelandic tarmac we were out taking pictures of the Aurora:
It was while at this location that Richard and I got our first taste of the scourge of serious photography in Iceland – bloody tourists!
They walk in front of you waving torches and camera-phones without so much as an excuse me – inconsiderate bastards – I could have got a lot of satisfaction had I thought of adding a Glock 19 to the kit !
So, lesson learned for the future – keep away from the tourist traps; or so we thought.
We moved on to a much more secluded location and a small frozen lake:
We got back to the hotel around midnight, Malcolm retired to his bed, but Rich and myself were doing it pro-style, downloading and backing up images and pinging a post up on Facebook. Coupled with a thirst for tea we didn’t see sleep until around 3am, which was far from ideal as we had a mammoth drive up to Myvatn the following morning.
I could do the drive myself in about 4 hours – but I’d lose my license and be bankrupted by speeding fines in under 2 hours – driving speed limits in Iceland are bloody awful if you are a UK driver!
The drive up to Myvatn was intense and non-stop, and we decided to stop at the iconic falls of Godafoss – big mistake – tourist alarm!
The wind was off the falls so we had problems with spray on lenses, so close work with a wide angle was impractical to say the least – so a further PoV and a pano approach with a longer lens was called for.
Once the vista view was done we waited for the sun to get low enough for the God Rays to start showing in the huge curtain of spray that we were ‘blessed with’ – the results certainly had the throng of Chinese tourists totally engrossed:
Landscape photography is all about analyzing what you can see, and when you struggle to make the standard view work for you you MUST find something in the detail – and detail can be shot no matter how much of an ‘epic fail’ the scene appears to be. Yes, the two shots above might not be your ‘cup of tea’, but I know someone will like them and make a purchase! And we’ve got dozens of them – so it’s not a fail!
KNOW THY MARKET PLACE KIDS!
And NEVER go out on a landscape session without a short to medium telephoto – EVER!
In the evening, after checking in to the Hotel Sel at Myvatn and getting over the shock of the smell of the water coming from the taps in our bathroom (oh my God it was bad!) we were treated to another display of Aurora that must have peaked at Kp7 around midnight:
Big Kp number displays are incredible to witness and in truth stills cannot do it justice – you have to stop taking pictures and just look up in awe – and I guarantee it’ll make you painfully aware of your own insignificance……it makes you feel like what you really are, less than a blip on the screen.
We had the opportunity the photograph the Aurora on 5 of the 7 nights we were in Iceland – we certainly filled our boots with it I can tell you.
The daylight opportunities in and around the Myvatn area where far too numerous for us to really do them justice in the time we had available, but we did our best:
The Hell-Hole of Námafjall Hverir
Not the best time of year to photograph this area – covered in snow, the vivid colours of the ground are hidden for the most part. But it still feels like the gateway to Hell, and the over-powering sulphur-laden atmosphere leaves a lasting impression – especially when combined with the tap water back at the hotel.
But if you want to be in an extreme volcanic area you have to take it all in your stride.
Now here’s the thing; sulfur, air and water go together to make sulfuric acid, especially when we take into account the additions of extreme heat and pressure – nice!
Tourists again find this spot a big draw – having a good time standing warming their dumb asses against the fumeroles and trying to hover their bloody DJI Phantoms in the acidic gas clouds!
Really, to get great images here you need to pitch up in the autumn, late in an evening when they’ve all buggered off in their coaches back to their hotels.
And before anyone says ‘they’ve as much right to be there as you Andy’ – NO they haven’t, not when they show such disrespect to the landscape and environment – you should see the litter they drop for starters…..bastards….grrrrrrr.
I was stood talking to a Norwegian geologist while at Namafjall, who told me in a very matter-of-fact manner that the magma was rising and was only around 800 meters below my feet……’great’ says I, ‘do all these Muppets know this?’
‘The tour leader on the coach tells them, but they either don’t listen or are too stupid to comprehend it’ says he.
I can’t blame the Icelandic people for letting them in – get their money before they get burnt to a crisp here, or drowned at Vik!
Major Geological Landmarks
The Mid Atlantic Tectonic Plate Boundary – it’s Hand of God time!
Just over a mile up the road from Namafjall is this rather innocuous looking feature:
But innocuous and insignificant it certainly is not!
Coachloads of tourists drive straight past it never giving it a second thought. I’d love to photograph this from the other side with the sun setting in the gap – another shot for autumn.
The Tephra and Pseudo Craters of Myvatn
Hverfjall Tephra Crater
The geological processes which formed these two landmarks boggle the mind – both features result from a meeting of copious amounts of ground water and boggy ground and even more copious amounts of hot moving lava flow. Put simply – you just wouldn’t want to be there at the time, believe me!
I’d been looking at the Hverfjall Crater for two days trying to find somewhere to plonk the tripod to get the shot I had in my head. And towards the end of Thursday I found it, quite by accident, down a track leading to a stuffed bird museum (don’t ask!).
Stunning winter light and a pancake flat snow field, kill the saturation in post – yes sir thanks muchly. Out comes to 70-200 f2.8 and just wait for the sunlight to pop from behind the cloud.
The big thing that got me was the light quality, which is something you can only get at high latitudes – it’s a landscapers dream.
About two hours later I found the location to shoot the next image, a group of pseudo craters around Lake Myvatn – the sunlight gave some cracking top lighting to this landmark feature.
And we have to have a colourful one of the lake don’t we:
Friday morning saw us making the next big move down to Skaftafell, and because the highland road was closed because of the snow, we had to do the N1 eastern coastal route. Eleven hours driving, but a stunning drive it was – the light over the highland plain and the immense vistas of the Eastern Coast blew me away.
Two things struck myself and Rich on this mammoth coastal drive.
- You can’t help but ‘pano everything’ because the vistas are just too epic.
- Why is there no one here?
Skaftafell, Jokulsarlon & Vik
Checked into the Skaftafell Hotel and YAY – no sulfur in the water!
No way was I paying the price to eat in the evening here – so it’s over the road to the N1 services for the best meal I’ve had in ages – all you can eat buffet of breaded pork medallions, spring rolls, potatoes gratin and pepper sauce – under £30 for me and Rich – we were stuffed!
Aurora photography on this Friday night and small hours of Saturday morning came in two parts.
The hotel lies at the foot of two huge glaciers coming down from the huge Vatnajokull ice cap. There’s something of a penalty to pay for being near the foot of a glacier, and that penalty is a katabatic wind.
Holy Crap! They come from nowhere, are so cold you can’t believe it, go so fast they’ll rip the clothes from you back, and then disappear as fast as they arrive.
Here’s one caught by Rich, on its way down the glacier to give us a battering:
We gave up after 30 minutes and half a dozen batterings, and went back to the hotel – and waited….
And sure enough things calmed down and the skies cleared around 1am on Saturday morning, and we were off out again. A different look to the lights this time around – very active but diffused:
Above is a pano of the Fjallajokull Glacier, which creeps its way down from the main Vatnajokull ice cap.
This is 19 vertical frames stitched together for 49000 pixels – and there’s another three rows to go on this top and bottom, but it keeps making my Mac fall over when I try to put it together!!
Spot the lunatic tourist bottom right – he’s good for scaling. We were taking bets on whether he’d fall in or not, and how long he’d survive if he did – what a prick.
I also got the opportunity to take one of those super-minimalist abstract landscapes:
Eat your heart out Rhine 2 – hey, a bloke can dream can’t he?
Later the Aurora paid us another visit:
Sunday was a strange day. Lack of sleep was getting to both of us and Malcolm too, but we headed for the East Beach at Vik for the iconic sea stacks:
Then we moved on to Skogafoss Falls but it was rammed to bursting with idiots having a laugh falling over – I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a crowd.
I was standing in the river with a standard composition ready to go when a guy wades out in front of me, sits on my feature foreground rock and starts drinking a bottle of beer. Then his mate starts taking pictures of him. I ‘nicely’ asked them what their game was and their reply was they were doing a series of shots with ‘beer boy’ drinking a beer in the dodgiest situation they could find at various landmark sites around the world.
I just nodded and quietly left the river, packed up and went back to the car park before I ended up doing a stretch for murder…
So we drove on a few hundred yards and left the vehicle, having decided to walk up to the hidden waterfall of Kvernufoss:
What a stunning little hidden gem this fall is, it would be nice to go back in the autumn and get behind the fall curtain!
We left Kvernufoss for the long drive back to the Northern Light Hotel for our last night in Iceland, but we had not gone very far – Holtsos actually – when we were greeted by a view of the most magnificent sunset sky over the Westman Islands:
Here’s a wider pano with a rather annoying drone operator in the bottom of the frame to add some scale, and the rocks in the lake removed:
Then another minimalist shot emerged in front of me:
No Aurora on Sunday night, the Valkeries obviously felt they had shown us enough, so it was a case of a few large mugs of the fabulous hot chocolate, a bit of packing, a shower, some more hot choc and BED.
Our plane wasn’t due to leave until 7.40pm Monday so we had some hours to fill, and our plan was to have a drive down to the Sea Stacks at Reykjanesta. The sky was grey and there was a bit of a ‘blow’ on the go so things looked promising.
On the way I made Rich take one for the team:
Reykjanesta is a stunning place, and also a place of great sadness – and a bucket-load of shame too. This small bit of coastline was famous as the breeding colony for the Great Auk. But their favorite breeding island vanished in a puff of volcanic action in 1830. That was on top of their slaughter by British sailors in 1808.
Those few that remained took refuge on the small basalt rock island of Eldey which lies on the horizon about 15km offshore. But on the 3rd of June 1844 four Icelandic fishermen set sail for the island to secure a specimen Auk for a collector.
What they found when they got there is unclear, but suffice to say when they left Eldey the worlds very last pair of breeding Great Auks were killed and their single egg smashed.
And folk wonder why I hate the majority of human-kind.
As a memorial there is a near 6 foot bronze Auk set into the cliff top and it gazes out in the exact line of sight to Eldey – it brings a lump to your throat for sure:
The sea was like a washing machine gone mad with 20 to 30 foot breakers smashing into the sea stacks:
It wasn’t exactly fun, but it was exciting (apologies for any language you might have heard!) and I knew we had an escape route from this cave under the cliff – but we were on the ragged edge of safety!
The pics were well worth the effort:
That’s about it then, afterwards it was off back to Keflavik airport and a delayed flight back home for tea and medals thanks to a strike by French ATC.
I’m going to be organizing landscape workshops to Iceland in 2020. I haven’t formulated them yet, but they will most likely be in September 2020 and March 2021. They will be formatted in such a way as to steer clear of the main tourist traps and concentrate more on locations that are not quite so well known.
I have had a lot of interest in these so far, but if it’s something you fancy just drop me a line.
Happy photography everyone, hope you enjoyed this post!
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