
What can one do on a rainy Monday night in Reykjavík city? Apart from watching reality TV, you could join a sweaty group of Salsa-crazed people downtown.
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Click on the picture to watch an audio slideshow of a road trip from Reykjavík to Akureyri and back, one of the most frequently-traveled journeys on Iceland’s Ring Road. The pictures were taken out of the window of a moving car; snapshots of the ever-changing landscape and weather on this route, which many Icelanders have stopped noticing.
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Akureyri (“gravel bank field”) promises visitors a lively stay with its many art galleries and museums, outdoor recreation in summer and winter, an awakening of the taste buds at the town’s gourmet restaurants and breathtaking views of natural sites around the corner. Take a look at this special promotion about Iceland’s northern capital.
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Inhabitants of the Westman Islands, south of Iceland, fear that not enough puffins will be caught in time for their annual National Festival during Merchants’ Weekend, the first weekend in August. Traditionally, locals prepare puffin meat for visitors.
“We won’t catch enough for the National Festival,” local puffin processor Magnús Bragason told 24 Stundir. “But I’m working on getting puffins from Grímsey [Iceland’s northernmost inhabited island]. Maybe Grímsey will save the National Festival this year.”
Last year the puffin hunting season began on July 1 and, according to Bragason, last year there weren’t enough caught birds to feed festival attendees either. This year the puffin season didn’t begin until July 10 because of the poor situation of the puffin stock, and the first few days after the season began the wind direction was unfortunate for puffin hunting.
The weather forecast for the next few days is, however, good for puffin hunting. “But the ten days we missed of the 30 days of hunting before the National Festival make a lot of difference,” Bragason said.
Few puffin chicks have survived since 2005, probably because there is a lack of sand eels on which the puffins feed, according to Erpur Snaer Hansen, a biologist at the South Iceland Nature Institute.
Hansen said that two- to three-year-old puffins make up 70 percent of the hunting stock, but birds from that age groups are almost completely missing this year. “When 70 percent of the hunting stock is missing, the number of caught birds drops automatically.”
Hansen said it is uncertain whether many puffin chicks will survive this year. The South Iceland Nature Institute and Bjargfélagid, an association of puffin hunters, will meet on Sunday and decide whether it is responsible to continue hunting puffins.
For limited time while supplies last, new subscribers to Iceland Review will receive the book Adventure in Iceland (normally USD 47) as a gift. You will also be entered in a draw to win a trip to Iceland next year! Start your subscription now by ordering here.
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What makes this Bang Gang album different from the previous albums is Bardi Jóhannsson’s decision to sing it himself. This really sets the tone for the album as his voice is distinctively low and monotone. His voice in addition to the soft quiet melodies results in an album which at first sounds quite flat.
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If Doc Brown’s time machine made famous in the 1985 classic Back to the Future could ferry us back, say, five million years we would find the area now known as present-day Skaftafell National Park, in southeast Iceland, virtually flat, fully vegetated and, gasp, snow and glacier-free.
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This week participate in the Reykjavík Experiment Marathon, the most broad-reaching art event that the Reykjavík Art Museum has undertaken since its inception. The exhibition is a joint project of the Reykjavík Art Museum and the Serpentine Gallery in London and the centerpiece of the 2008 Reykjavík Arts Festival.
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