maanantai 6. lokakuuta 2008

The Halldór Laxness Hike


The only “must” Icelandic tourist attraction on my list before coming here was Halldór Laxness’ home museum Gljufrásteinn near Mosfellsbaer. I have secretly fantasized about visiting it for weeks, but the way there has seemed too complicated without a car.


Today the weather was sunny and less windy, the new snow and bright lights was a tempting combination for an outing in the wild nature, so we took bus 15 to Mosfellsbaer (a small township north on the way to Akureyri). This community is basically enclosed by mountains and fells, and it has a true small town spirit. Mosfellsbaer seemed less affluent than the other satellite towns to Reykjavík – it’s easy to detect the income level by looking at the supermarkets. They had only Bónus and Krónan – the screaming yellow thrift stores. Funnily enough, the landmark building in the community seemed to be the brand new KFC restaurant, where we also strayed. (It was my second visit to KFC ever, the first one happened in the summer on Kingston campus on Jamaica. I still am not convinced.)


From Mosfellsbaer there was another bus to Laxnes (even the place has been named after the famous author) but it only drove four times a day on Saturdays. We had to wait three hours for the next one. First it didn’t seem like a worthwhile wait, but then I decided to go for it, as it didn’t seem likely that we’d bother all the way up again during this trip. In three hours, we did KFC, Kronan and a video store café, which had a true tacky arctic small town stickiness to it. The tables were covered with strawberry-patterned wax tablecloths, the waitress was wearing a tracksuit and the only reading available was Seytt og heyrt (Seen and Heard). I was also wearing tracksuit bottoms, because I had run out of all other wearable trousers. I have also started practicing my Icelandic through trashy mags, so I had already purchased the number and keep it happily on the kitchen table. It’s funny how Icelandic celebrities also look like pigs when drunk. However, if compared to the assembly line of KFC, the video store café was in its own way a truly unique experience. Whole families were having lunch there, and the atmosphere was yet quite un-globalized.


We only got to Gljufrásteinn fifteen minutes before closing time. I tried to ask humbly, and the woman working at the desk was sympathetic because of our honest efforts to get there, so we were still allowed a tour in the house, though not a full one with the audiotapes.


It was the second home museum I visited this year. The first one was Bob Marley’s in Kingston in the summer. Both men’s wives are still alive, and the families are somehow involved in the running of the businesses. The entry to the Laxness museum was however about ten times cheaper than to the Marley one. So the similarities almost end there. But Bob’s house did have the same kind of feeling of carefree living as did Halldór’s. In neither of the places one had a feeling of stepping in a museum, and both places had very modest kitchens. Halldór had a bit more bling bling in the house than Bob: there was a very fancy swimming pool in the garden overlooking the mountains, creating the same kind of “edgeless” experience as the boutique hotels are nowadays offering in more tropical destinations than Iceland.


Halldór’s house was filled with expensive statues from around the world, and most of the furniture seemed to be designed by Arne Poulsen. The views to the mountains were breathtaking to the extent that I was not sure if I could have taken it as a daily working environment. Too much beauty can also dull the senses. He used to write standing up with a pencil, all the time while writing he would walk around in the study. It was fantastic to see the working space, as an example of how one can arrange a day devoted to writing.


Although the visit to the house was short (yet the poor woman had to stay there overtime because of us), I left the building with a sense of fulfillment. We stayed on the premises for a while, walking on Halldór’s paths, crossing streams, sitting on stones risking “pee disease”, looking for trolls and elves. The neighbour’s dog accompanied us. All the cats and dogs in Iceland are allowed to roam free. Our packed dinner from Krónan was however too frozen to be enjoyed outdoors. We could only think of having the Kókómjölk.


The visit ended with an adventurous Halldór Laxness Hike. As the next bus to Mosfellsbaer was due in two and half hours and Laxnes was not exactly a village but a remote concentration of perhaps ten private houses, it was impossible to stay there waiting for transportation. I also decided not to take a taxi this time. So we decided to walk back. We estimated the distance to be five-six kilometers. The views were definitely worth the effort, as long as there was still some light. There were many horse stables on the way back, so the kids were enjoying themselves, shooting photos of each horse they saw. There was a proper asphalt path for pedestrians, but at times it was dangerously icy. The ice slowed down the hike remarkably. It took us two hours to walk the way that without the ice might have taken only an hour.


Although in Finland one is totally used to walking on ice at least four months in a year, the Icelandic ice seems different. Or the roads are constructed differently. The pavements are bumpier and one feels like a senior citizen or a lame duck out there. They don’t bring any sand on the ice, or at least haven’t done so far. So walking is definitely at your own risk. Yesterday the two of us fell down three times. No bones were broken, but there were some tears. I am now thinking of investing in bus cards. But there’s a chance that the snow will still melt.

1 kommentti:

Strategicus kirjoitti...

good blog and death to capitalism.i wanted you to invite you to our blog but did not have your e mail address.

regards

Agha
transoxiana@mail.com