Click on the picture to watch an audio slideshow of the lambing season at Brimnes, a farm in the north of Iceland, in April 2008. Sheep farmer Arnar Gústafsson and his girlfriend Edda Björk take shifts watching over the nearly 300 ewes and helping them give birth 24/7 for about two months or until the last lamb is born. In Iceland, the arrival of lambs is synonymous with the arrival of summer. The lambing season is currently at its height.
more

Located just 40 minutes by car and six minutes from Keflavík International Airport, Sandgerdi (“Sandy Hedge”) is a growing town of 1,700 with a storied history and loads to see. Read this special promotion about the hidden secrets of one of Iceland's most charming seaside villages.
more
Somewhere between Mývatn and Grímsstaðir, the road rose up into the mountains, through rocky valleys and deserted farms before the tarmac roads stopped and I found myself on unpaved roads and covered in dust and grit every time other vehicles sped past.
The road became more and more exposed, frequently twisting and turning to reveal sharp drops to hidden valleys.
At one point, I pulled over to visit a mountain hut. These huts are provided for emergency use only, and it was easy to see how grateful you would be to find one of these huts in the isolated areas where they are located, especially in the deepest snow and bitterest winds.
The hut was painted orange, which I suppose would have helped in stand out in an Icelandic winter wonderland, and was a square, flat roofed affair, with a short covered chimney poking out from one side.
It excited my adventurous spirit, and I couldn’t wait to peek inside. I was pleased to find the hut unoccupied, and cautiously opened the door. Ignoring the smell of slightly stale air, I found a small bed, warm blankets, a cupboard with meager supplies, and most reassuringly a fire set and ready for lighting.
I later found out that nearby Grímsstaðir holds the record for Iceland’s lowest ever recorded temperature: -38C in 1918. I thanked the warm June sunshine that I wasn’t here in an emergency, or the winter of 1918 and stepped back outside.
The view from the hut was absolutely stunning, looking down a series of valleys from which the road would disappear and then reappear far in the distance. The sun glinted off a solitary vehicle far below, making them look like shooting stars across the rock strewn, alpine-esque scenery.
This little emergency hut, providing shelter in the face of whatever weather is thrown at it, is the responsibility of ICE-SAR – Iceland Search and Rescue association.
ICE-SAR can source its roots in the Westman Island Rescue Team in 1918, but has changed quite a bit then. Oh, and they’ve achieved a great deal too.
ICE-SAR were the first international team to arrive on scene for the earthquake in Haiti in 2010, they have acquired the first rescue ship, and for that matter, first rescue helicopter in Iceland.
They have dealt with some volcanoes going off or something too. I forget the details. You might have heard of them.
ICE-SAR is a modern, all-singing, all-dancing search and rescue organization. Although singing and dancing are frowned upon during actual rescue missions.
Not only do they have all the kit – snowmobiles, super jeeps, mobile communication centers, ships, lifeboats, dog teams, quad bikes, hovercraft, snow groomers (me neither!), mountain bikes, kayaks; anything you can think of, they have some of the most highly trained and specialist search and rescue teams in the world.
And there is something else. ICE-SAR members wear a red and blue uniform that is not dissimilar to that of Spiderman. Except it doesn’t shoot webs.
ICE-SAR are not only looking out for us land-lubbers.
ICE-SAR also take maritime safety very seriously, as well as the previously mentioned ship, it has 14 other vessels around Iceland’s coast, 35 RIBs (Rigid Inflatable Boats) and 90 inflatable boats.
It runs a compulsory maritime safety course for sailors, which has dramatically cut the number of Icelandic lives lost at sea.
ICE-SAR has some neat tricks up its – no doubt, Gore-Tex – sleeve. Eighty percent of its funding comes from sales of fireworks on the lead up to New Years Eve. How cool is that?
If that doesn’t grab you – fundraising and firework displays – check your pulse, or else how about purchasing a really cute ICE-SAR key ring? Last years’ version was irresistible with an ICE-SAR rescue worker holding a child in his arms.
ICE-SAR even encourages foreign travelers to record their travel plans with them at their website, so they know where to look should you go missing. Its kind of thoughtful, isn’t it?
ICE-SAR’s biggest achievement though, if you are asking me, is harnessing the huge power of altruism and skills of Icelanders across the country to save lives.
Whether it be through daring incidents of wrenching hapless tourists from deep glacial crevasses, changing tires in the West Fjords, educating others in accident prevention or running youth groups, ICE- SAR do all of this through volunteers.
ICE-SAR has 95 search and rescue teams dotted right across Iceland (you’d think they would make it 100, wouldn’t you?), which contain an amazing 3500 volunteers who offer their services, skills and knowledge to get Icelanders and foreigners out of sticky situations.
I think this is quite a feat; roughly 1% of the country’s population is willing to perform such a crucial role, for no pay.
With accident prevention and other volunteers, this raises to a total of 18,000 volunteers. This is surely something to be commended. I can’t think of many other countries where this could happen.
There are many reasons for people to sign up to ICE-SAR. Getting to drive a big truck whilst wearing shades, being involved n training exercises, camaraderie, access to Gucci kit, but beyond all, Icelanders seem to have an inbuilt need to help each other.
Maybe it’s after centuries of living on a harsh, inhospitable island isolated from the rest of the world, maybe it’s because they just want to be self sufficient in every possible way.
Whatever the reason, I’m glad that they are there.
Next time you drive past a little orange hut in the middle of nowhere, I hope that you are too.
Edward Hancox - edhancox@live.co.uk
Magnús Skarphéðinsson, principal of the Icelandic Elf School, has expressed his concern that Independence Party MP Árni Johnsen may be subject to an accident after relocating a boulder allegedly inhabited by elves to his home in the Westman Islands.
more
The first music festival this summer, Reykjavík Live, kicks off with concerts in the center of Iceland’s capital tonight and will carry on through May 20. The venues are Gamli Gaukurinn, Glaumbar, Prikið and Frú Berlaug.
more
President of Iceland Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson and his main rival for the presidential election on June 30, Þóra Arnórsdóttir, are supported by an almost equal number of voters, 41.3 and 43.4 percent, respectively, as indicated in a new survey.
more
The West Fjords District Court ruled on Monday that a man found guilty of having drowned a Labrador by tying its front and hind legs, fastening it to car tires and throwing it in the ocean is to pay ISK 100,000 (USD 786, EUR 612) in fine.
more
The current issue of the quarterly magazine Iceland Review includes interviews with fashion photographer Saga Sig and conceptual artist Rúrí. Also, we take you to Grímsstaðir á Fjöllum, that desolate land coveted by a Chinese tycoon, and also explore Icelandic archeological remains. We discuss the Icelandic Church, the flourishing gaming industry, debate the future of Iceland’s energy resources and interview the president of the Icelandic National League of North America. Subscribe now and receive a free photo book by IR’s editor Páll Stefánsson of the Eyjafjallajökull eruptions. Click here to subscribe to the magazine and here to buy a gift subscription.
more
The Reykjavík Shorts&Docs was held in Reykjavík from May 6 to 9 in Bíó Paradís, and what an enriching experience it was to attend the festival.
more

Shedding light on Iceland’s thousand-year history, as manifested in remains ranging from Viking graves to enchanted sites, Mannvist is a fundamental piece of writing. Ásta Andrésdóttir met with its author, archaeologist Birna Lárusdóttir.
more
“The House Project” currently on display in Hafnarborg, the Hafnarfjörður Centre of Culture and Fine Art, is a new artwork by Hreinn Friðfinnsson consisting of a photography series of the three houses. His work is described as “a poetic and philosophical exploration of every day human experience.”
more