The Star Malaysia

Reykjavik people officially hate the rain

- In Reykjavik. — AP

REYKJAVIK: Pop singer Helgi Bjornsson, who is well-known in his native Iceland for a 1980s hit titled I Do Like the Rain, recently appeared on national television while a deadpan reporter challenged him to defend the song’s premise.

The people of Reykjavik do not like the rain anymore.

This summer has been so grey and wet in the capital of Iceland that meteorolog­ists have to look as far back as 1914 to find records for a worse May and June.

In other parts of Europe, especially Britain and Scandinavi­a, a heat wave is expected to continue well into July.

The stark contrast is no coincidenc­e. High pressure over western Europe alters the jet stream and pushes clouds and rain over the continent’s northern posts, causing foul weather in this North Atlantic island nation.

“It’s the other side of the heat wave token,” Iceland meteorolog­ist Trausti Jonsson said.

“The people of Reykjavik are paying for the sunshine in England and southern Scandinavi­a.”

During June, the month of midnight sun and camping holidays in Iceland, sunshine touched Reykjavik for a total of 70 hours.

The temperatur­e reached 13.2 °C on the warmest day, two degrees shy of Reykjavik’s average for the month.

In May, it rained every single day. Summer’s delayed arrival has spurred a weather forecast obsession and constant disappoint­ment in the world’s northernmo­st capital city.

A forecast calling for 11 hours of clear sky today brought giddy excite- ment, with many posting on social media how they planned to spend the sunniest day in two weeks.

But then the forecast changed. The sun now is expected to give way to clouds by noon, according to the Icelandic Met Office.

Some here have given up hope. One travel agent told local media that bookings for last-minute beach holidays are coming in “without any marketing on our behalf”.

Tanning salons are making a comeback, while ice cream vendors, house painters and the staffs of outdoor swimming pools struggle with low demand for their services.

“You need about two days of sun for outdoor wood to completely dry,” house painter Mar Gudmundsso­n lamented.

“I don’t think we have had that.” Summer is Iceland’s main tourist season and many travellers sleep in tents during their stays.

The Laugardalu­r campsite in Reykjavik is seeing slightly fewer guests than in previous years. But manager Oddvar Arnason observed that “most people don’t change their means of accommodat­ion after arrival and simply adjust”.

Alex Moreno, a 17-year-old camper from Granada in Spain, said he found the brisk climate more pleasant than the boiling weather at home.

“Just put on a jacket and it’s fine here,” he said. — AP

 ??  ?? Ain’t no sunshine: Swiss tourists Etienne and Celine Evéquoz pitching a tent at the Laugardalu­r campsite
Ain’t no sunshine: Swiss tourists Etienne and Celine Evéquoz pitching a tent at the Laugardalu­r campsite

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