The following day, I met with the team of scientists from the Glaciological Society and Meteorological Office and loaded up the super jeeps on 38” wheels and headed southward along the coast.
There, the ocean meets farmland with sheep and horses with tall cliffs and waterfalls.
We headed up a gravel road north towards the ice cap with 3 vehicles. Once on snow, the team would deflate the immense tires so that we would have traction as we climbed the almost 1500 meter ice cap that covers the Katla volcano.
The team broke into three groups and began conducting research at different locations. The vehicle I was in traversed bumpy snowdrifts following the GPS to the research location that they have visited annually. The team began drilling ice cores into the flat snow- covered ice cap and carefully measured the cylinders of snow and firn in length and mass in order to calculate density.
I had a great time filming on the ice cap and it was suggested that I join a scientist the following day on the neighboring Eyjafjallajökull outlet glacier. That glacier looks like what one would imagine a glacier to be with blue ice, a glacial lake and river flowing to the ocean rather than the flat-looking snow covered ice cap that the Mýrdalsjökull is.
The research that day consisted of steam drilling into the ice for ablation poles that are used to calculate glacier ablation/melting and ice velocity. I enjoyed hiking on the ice with crampons and have done some steam drilling on the Gulkana glacier in Alaska with a team from UAF so the technique was familiar.
I was able to ride horses outside Reykajavik with Hestar and met some cute Icelandic children.
Then I drove North along the coastline and winding roads of the West Fjords to Heydalur.
The Heydalur guesthouse has many horses, a stocked trout pond on the stream that meets the fjord, natural hot springs and an indoor greenhouse.
I quickly filmed around the area and hiked a trail above Heydalur into snowline along a waterfall and filmed the fjords from above.
The next day I joined a two of the horse guides for a ride down to the beach on the fjord which was amazing.
I was able to interview and enjoy a sea kayaking session with the talented sea kayak guide, Halldór Sveinbjörnsson, in the waters of the historic town of Isafjordur, which is situated below steep snow-covered peaks.
The following day, I drove east along the remote northwestern coast of Iceland along farms in the rain.
I arrived at Husabakki near Dalvik and settled in at the hostel that was located on a nature preserve. I listened to varieties of birds as I managed media and battery charging in preparation for a day of split boarding from sea to summit with Bergmenn Mountain Guides.
We had a group of 8 or so with two guides and skinned up spring corn snow on peaks rising from the ocean outside Akureyri. It was a bit cloudy but the snow was good and thrilling to ride straight down towards the ocean.
After our descent, I packed up and headed out on a long rainy drive to Reykjavik. My last day in Iceland allowed for filming throughout Reykavik and to interview several of the research scientists from the Icelandic Meteorological Office. I met with the head of climate research, Halldór Björnsson, geophysicist Tomas Johannesson and meteorologist, Halfdan Agustsson.

Finally, I visited the the presidential residence, Bessastaðir, for an interview with Iceland’s President, Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson.
The President is very intelligent and kind and responded to my questions in great length. I asked him of his youth growing up in Isafjordur, where I had just been. Most of our conversation was focused on his perspectives and initiatives on climate change impacts in Iceland and the Arctic. He discussed his cooperative initiatives between countries of the Arctic and the Himalayan region with these issues. He also elaborated on the concept of the Himalaya as the Third Pole in regards to the volume of ice that, with climate change, is impacting the livelihoods of billions of people.
Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson established the first Arctic Circle Conference in 2013, which was attended by 1200 delegates from over 40 countries.
The President suggested I attend and I registered with Risan Media to attend the conference. It looks like I will have an opportunity to lead a presentation and to show a Risan Media Iceland video at the conference as well. The support from Nikwax enabled me to have diverse experiences in Iceland and to document further material for The Risan Film Project. You can find further information on the projects at risanmedia.com