Sunday Tribune

IN REYKJAVIK

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Scarce lagoon tickets, crawling traffic and booked restaurant­s ICELAND has become the coldest tourism hot spot – and for good reason. A short drive from Reykjavik airport is the Blue Lagoon; an hour later, you can be neck-deep in the lava field’s natural geothermal spa.

The Golden Circle is another must-do. It’s about a 300km loop from Reykjavik to the centre of

Iceland and back. Visitors pass through glorious landscapes that include molten lava eruptions and some of the most spectacula­r waterfalls before returning to a once relatively quiet capital city now booming with restaurant­s, souvenir shops, museums and bars.

While it’s still possible to find spots in Iceland that look like a mural, its go-to destinatio­ns are often overcrowde­d. Tickets for the Blue Lagoon are frequently sold out. The Golden Circle has become so touristrid­den that you can simply follow the slow-moving buses rather than use GPS.

And if you dare enter a Reykjavik restaurant without a reservatio­n, you’d better be dining at 4pm. If you prefer the road less travelled, go here during the less popular winter months (though it’s cold and dark) or make your reservatio­ns early.

IN WEST ICELAND

Alava tube, glacial cave, geothermal pool and more

Remarkably, however, you can experience geothermal saunas, glaciers, caves and more after driving about an hour north-west from Reykjavik to a portion of the country that seems virtually untouched by tourists: the region known as West Iceland.

The water flowing into Krauma, a geothermal bath in Reykholt, arrives directly from the smallest glacier in Iceland before being dispersed into five baths of varying temperatur­e. (Only true Icelanders could dip more than their toes in the hottest of the baths.) If you go midweek, you may be the only people here.

Vatnshelli­r Cave, within Snaefellsj­okull National Park, offers guided tours of an 8 000-year-old, below-the-surface lava cave. After descending in a spiral, wearing a provided helmet and headlamp, you’ll feel like you’ve entered a different planet. (Pro tip: Although it may have been warm enough for a fugitive couple to allegedly live there comfortabl­y centuries ago, it’s now bitterly cold in winter, so dress appropriat­ely.)

If you take the Into the Glacier tour, which departs from Husafell or the Klaki base camp, depending

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JABIN BOTSFORD
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