Day 25 – Goodbye Iceland

The final day was here. I packed up my stuff the best I could into my 70L backpack, gave the car a nice scrub and wash, and returned it to the rental company.

They did a quick inspection and didn’t notice the paint chips, or they did notice it and didn’t care. I hadn’t applied the paint from the paint-pen I had bought earlier. The colour was a terrible mismatch.

It was a bittersweet moment saying goodbye to the car. I had driven ~4800 kms in the last 3 weeks, had been through some highs and lows with it, had taken it to the to extreme ends of the island and on roads that I probably shouldn’t have been on, I had stalled it, revved it, eaten in it, slept next to it and had spent more time driving it than I had expected to.

Sure, it wasn’t really built for Iceland terrain, but the little Spark sure had heart (for a car anyway).

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Goodbye

I guess this was it. I mentally switched from “outdoor mode” into “city mode” and walked to the bus-stop to take a bus to the airport.

As I saw the terrain on the way to the airport, it didn’t look as alien as it had when I had first gotten in. Lava fields, distant volcanoes, snow-capped glaciers. I had seen it all.

As we pulled into the airport parking lot, I knew this wasn’t goodbye. I would be returning to this magical island many more times….

Day 24 – In and Around Reykjavik

Reykjavik had really livened up since I was here three weeks ago. The clouds were still around, and there still was a nip to the air, but there sure were a lot more people.

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Sunday morning in the harbour

I stumbled onto a flea market. The place smelt like rotten shark. And it was filled with strange foods – all kinds of sea creatures, weird eggs, cured horse among other things.

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Reykjavik Market

After the market, I came across a “free” walking tour. It had just started so I joined right in. The tour guide was nice enough to let me in, but he made sure to let me know that he was accepting tips.

The next little bit was about Reykjavik and its history, which was pretty dull. Even recalling it makes me sleepy.

I half-listened to the tour guide and mostly just enjoyed walking around in a crowd and taking pictures.

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Free tour
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Local Drinking Pond
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Water Fight
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Mooooooo
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Someone important in Iceland’s history
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Something about Elves
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Pond

After being shepherded around all morning, I had to break away. I walked around aimlessly and got to the Reykjavik Cathedral, whose architecture resembled more rocket-ship than church.

Iceland is very atheist and superstitious, which seems paradoxical but isn’t. Maybe this design was a homage to the marriage between science and religion?

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I retired back to my tent kinda early. Tomorrow, I will return my trusty horse – the Spark back to the rental and take the bus to the airport and onwards to Barcelona.